Bradford DeLong
Auteur de Slouching Towards Utopia: An Economic History of the Twentieth Century
A propos de l'auteur
Crédit image: http://econ161.berkeley.edu/
Œuvres de Bradford DeLong
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Date de naissance
- 1960-06-24
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- USA
- Études
- Harvard University (BA)
Harvard University (MA)
Harvard University (PhD|Economics) - Professions
- professor
- Organisations
- University of California, Berkeley
Membres
Critiques
Listes
Prix et récompenses
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 9
- Membres
- 309
- Popularité
- #76,232
- Évaluation
- 3.6
- Critiques
- 8
- ISBN
- 27
That's a tiny bit misleading. He writes about what he calls the "long twentieth century," beginning in 1870 not long after the end of the American Civil Warn, and ending in 2010, just after the election of Barack Obama and the 2008 housing crisis that kicked off the Great Recession.
It's ambitious -- that's 140 years on the entire world (with an acknowledged emphasis on the global north, but coverage of other regions as well), spanning what DeLong demonstrates is the greatest period of economic advancement and improvement in the history of humanity. He reaches backward every now and then, for example to the beginning of the industrial revolution in England, but does a very good job of staying on point for 530 or so pages.
There are recurring themes throughout the book -- "Polanyian rights," "really-existing socialism" and others reward an end-to-end read, because they are introduced once, and used over and over. I was struck, though, by the fact that individual chapters were really excellent short histories that could stand alone, on significant events in that long century. Want to understand the rise of the Soviet Union? Chapter 8, Really Existing Socialism, taught me things I never knew. Want to wrap your head around the economic forces and political genius that led to Hitler's rise? Chapter 9, Fascism and Nazism, is a pretty good textbook. Chapter 16, Reglobalization, Information Technology and Hyperglobalization is an outstanding explanation of the period, beginning most noticeably in the 1980s and running to about 2010, that produced so much wealth, and also social media.
The book is greater than the sum of its parts. Its parts are excellent.
You write a history of something when it's over, and DeLong's argument is that the long twentieth century has ended. That's not so much because of the date on the calendar, but because, DeLong says, the advantages and forces that led to such an astonishing climb have come apart at last. The book doesn't end pessimistically, exactly, but it acknowledges the enormous challenges we face right now -- a climate crisis, populism, discrimination and worse of some people, and an absence of thoughtful, principled and kind political leadership equal to the moment.
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