Peoples and Empires: A Short History of European Migration, Exploration, and Conquest, from Greece to the Present (Modern Library Chronicles) |
| | | | Title: | Peoples and Empires: A Short History of European Migration, Exploration, and Conquest, from Greece to the Present (Modern Library Chronicles) | | Author: | Anthony Pagden | | Publisher: | Modern Library | | Type: | Book / Paperback | | Publication Date: | 07 January, 2003 | | ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0812967615 / 9780812967616 | | List Price: | $14.95 | | You Save: | $3.74 | | Amazon Price: | $11.21 | |
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Product Description Written by one of the world’s foremost historians of human migration, Peoples and Empires is the story of the great European empires—the Roman, the Spanish, the French, the British—and their colonies, and the back-and-forth between “us” and “them,” culture and nature, civilization and barbarism, the center and the periphery. It’s the history of how conquerors justified conquest, and how colonists and the colonized changed each other beyond all recognition.
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The Structures Of Empires From Greece To Present. 14 August, 2004 For such a difficult subject, Pagden does a good job of creating a readable book detailing the rise and fall of European Empires. From Alexander the Great, and the Roman Empire to the decline of the British Empire, Pagden details the rise of these empires and why they fell. In the end, it was the weakness of the colonizers along with the rise of nationalism which spurred the end of all empires. Pagden also details that some of the early empires were not racially divided, but with the rise of science and some of the new European nation states, racism along with slavery reared its ugly head. Commerce and the search for raw materials spurred on the exploitation of these colonies, and reduced the natives to subject status.
This is a nice theory book about why empires came about. It gives a lot of information in a few short pages.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A133ZC2Z8MAIED
A Little Gem 08 July, 2008 I just finished Pagden's little gem. Tired of the neo-con's oversimplification and the post-modern's blather? Treat yourself to an 180 page antidote. His coverage of such a vast field is beautifully conceived and his his prose is a joy. He is justly critical of the way the West violated its core values and its own best instincts along with the rights of the people it dominated during the colonial era. But he is much more interested in analysis than judgment - a virtue fast becoming extinct in today's "academy".
Pagden is one of a vanishing breed, a serious scholar who knows that truth and fairness are the key virtues of the historian.
His critique of Islamic reactionaries in the Epilogue is worth the price for the book. Clearly stated, immanently fair, and devastatingly true.
- Reviewed by customer ID: AADGCJAWENLUS
Masterful. This One's For The Discerning Reader 21 November, 2004 Anthropologists seem to have debated and for now settled that the human race originated somewhere in the interiors of Africa and over the next few millions of years trekked their way to the farthest inhabitable corners of earth, successfully transitioning from nomadic hunter-gatherers to civilized settlers. These initial migrations delivered the firm broad base for human race to thrive upon spawning off diverse civilizations and cultures in their wake, without which all of us would still be hanging around in the African wilderness and arguable picking berries and shrubs for a living.
However, in this rather long and protracted development, it's the proceedings over the last 3000 years or so that has dictated for better or for worse the transformation of the human society from relatively small and local settlements to large nation states and empires. Never before had we humans thought of ourselves in terms of an overriding racial, religious or national identity, or found it important to have a common and binding rules and regulations to govern such monolithic entities. With the notion of race and religion came theories of supremacy and the need for bringing more and more of the non-conformers into the benevolent folds of civilization. One recurring theme of these 3000 years has been the European White man's quest to explore and wherever possible subjugate other geographies. And this is the theme of Anthony Pagden's book tiled "Peoples and Empires".
The author sets forth the leitmotif succinctly in the introduction and proceeds to discuss the subject over 10 masterfully crafted chapters, each one dedicated to deliberations on one pivotal event in human history. Beginning with Alexander's conquests and successive Greeko-Roman efforts at empire building, Pagden examines the raison detre for European nation states and empires, explorations into the orient and the unknown world and the purported justifications offered for these enterprises by those who fuelled them and the indelible effect these had on the current world order. With due consideration perhaps to the massive scope of the subject matter and in view of the fact his primary audience would be the educated non-expert, the author (wisely) glosses over large tracts of the intervening years. Those pages thus saved are however effectively devoted to debate the socio-political aspects of these events. Pagden's is by far the best "Independent third party perspective" that was ever presented to me on tricky subjects such as racial supremacy theories, colonial excursions, and the strife between the worlds dominant religions. His arguments are convincing, pithy and supported by well-researched and documented references. He is nothing short of magisterial while dealing with the shameful scourge of slavery. The only shortcomings of the book seems to be the total eclipse of the eastern hemisphere in the narrative, the eastern hemisphere being broached upon just as a backdrop for the colonial enterprises. However, the author seems partly justified in this, considering that the Chinese, Indian and Far-eastern societies remained largely self-contained, inert and did little to significantly alter the political landscape beyond their own domestic boundaries. More so, since this is a book dedicated to the study of European migration exploration and conquest.
If you have been reasonably well initiated into world history and would appreciate someone presenting the whole conundrum in perspective, look no further and dig in for a rewarding time.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A3UE5BR5X1L4R8
World History 02 December, 2005 Pagden is a professor at UCLA, and this is a sort book from the Modern Library Chronicles series, meant for the general reader or undergraduate class. The book covers the entire history of European conquest and empire, and the concomitant migration of peoples, from Greece to the 20th century. He shows the great continuity of thought and practice over these thousands of years regarding the motives for empire in Europe. One such concept is the idea of the civilizing mission of the European powers, "which relied upon a widely accepted vision of a universal human nature and a universal law of human evolution." (138) Another continuity was the belief that commerce led to peace and would bring an end to international conflict. His epilogue, written after 9-11, deals with the 'clash of civilizations' between Islam and the 'West' and look briefly at Islamic political theory and Muslim empires. This section is not as strong as the rest of the book, for here he seems to be charting ground he doesn't know as well, and though he does show some differences between Islamic Empires and Western, Christian Empires, it is obviously an afterthought that doesn't really fit in with his general argument. But on the whole I found this book greatly illuminating and well written, and plan on using it in my dissertation when I discuss whether the Soviet Union was an empire or not. I believe this book will help me substantiate my argument that yes, it was.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A35IJFKJX7PH2L
Readable, Cohesive Summary 08 August, 2008 This book is a fantastic introduction to the topic of European empire, granting readers a valuable global scope to the concept of empire. I would especially recommend this to any undergraduate student undertaking courses related to this topic (a good many). However, the books is not without its drawbacks or omissions, and these are not related simply due to the unnecessarily limited scope of considering such a broad topic in so few pages. Rather, they seem motivated by a) an unwillingness to consider the spread of European empire to polities based outside the continent of Europe itself and b) an odd and unjustifiably benign omission of the United States. However, although I discuss these points more fully below, this is not to detract from the value of this book. These points simply complement and broaden (for the modern period) Pagden's compact and generally excellent tract on the history of empire.
1) Pagden's omission of any detailed reference to 19th and 20th century Imperial Japan is unfortunate. The author neglects to make the valuable point that European concepts of empire were so thoroughly disseminated in this period that a distant Asian nation attempted "modernisation" through a blantant mediation of European imperialism, from architecture to government.
2) Even more surprising is Pagden's apparent unwillingness to consider the United States as an empire. He facetiously notes that Britain now refers to its fourteen remaining "colonies" as "dependant territories," and that Spain and France continue to retain vestiges of their former empires in the form of islands and enclaves, but neglects to include the US's retention of Puerto Rico, Guam, Hawaii, American Samoa, and the US Virgin Islands. Of course, these islands are ruled generally with the support of the current indigenous population, but so too are most of those of the existing European "colonies." Of course, Pagden is originally a South American, and perhaps this explains his need to designate the Falkland Islands as the "Malvinas Islands." In a "story" that concludes on "the end of empire" it seems a petty, and one could say hypocritical, act to implicitly buttress the Argentine claim on a chain of barren rocks inhabited by a small population that defines itself as "British."
3) Pagden also makes a glaring faux pas in his conclusion by asserting that "unlike any of the previous empires, those that had grown up after the beginning of the nineteenth century had rarely, except in southern Africa, exported many of their own peoples or created substantial Creole elites." Apparently Australia and New Zealand do not exist, except in the end of his conclusions to serve, especially the former, as evidence of national guilt for the excesses of its imperial foundations. Whilst this may seem sensitive, Pagden seems to be unduly critical of Britain, and to spare the United States of the same treatment by simply omitting it. More importantly Pagden, surprisingly for an intellectual and cultural historian, seems to fail to note that a global history (or one at the very least about the European concept of America) must consider America as a "European" society, at least in the nineteenth century. Conceiving of "manifest destiny", and later America's mini-empire in the Pacific and Carribean, as not part of the greater experience of nineteenth century European empire seems an unfounded semi-nationalistic, and inward looking, defence for his new home country.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A3ADXYGHYMFD1A
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