'Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm'
CH (born
June 9,
1917) is a
British Marxist historian and
author. Hobsbawm was a long-standing member of the now defunct
Communist Party of Great Britain and the associated
Communist Party Historians Group. He is president of
Birkbeck, University of London.
One of Hobsbawm's interests is the development of
traditions. His work is a study of their
construction in the context of the
nation state. He argues that many
traditions are invented by national elites to justify the existence and importance of their respective nation states.
Life
Hobsbawm (a clerical error altered his surname
[1]) was born in 1917 in
Alexandria,
Egypt to Leopold Percy Hobsbaum and Nelly Grün, both
Jewish, in
Alexandria,
Egypt, and he grew up in
Vienna and
Berlin. Although they lived in
German-speaking
countries, his parents continued to speak to him and his younger sister Nancy in
English.
His father died in
1929, and he started working as an
au pair and English
tutor.
He became an
orphan at age 14 upon the death of his mother. Subsequently, he and Nancy were adopted by his maternal aunt, Gretl, and paternal uncle, Sidney, who married and had a son, also named Eric. They all moved to
London in
1933.
Dr. Hobsbawm is twice married. First, to Muriel Seaman in
1943 (divorced in
1951) and secondly, to Marlene Schwarz. He has two children with Marlene, Julia Hobsbawm and
Andy Hobsbawm, and also a son Joshua from a previous relationship.
He became a
Companion of Honour in
1998.
Politics
He joined the
Socialist Schoolboys in
1931 and the
Communist party in
1936. He was member of the
Communist Party Historians Group from
1946 to
1956.
The
Soviet Invasion of Hungary in 1956 marked the end of the Communist Party Historian's Group and led most of its members to remove themselves from the British
Communist Party. Hobsbawm, uniquely among his colleagues, remained in the Party, however, going so far as to defend the Soviet invasion of Hungary. Writing in the ''
Daily Worker'' in late 1956, Hobsbawm argued that: "While approving, with a heavy heart, of what is now happening in Hungary, we should therefore also say frankly that we think the USSR should withdraw its troops from the country as soon as this is possible." (''Daily Worker'', 9 November 1956)
Later he came to support the
eurocommunist faction in the CPGB. In "The Forward March of Labour Halted", originally a ''
Marxism Today'' article published in September 1978, he argued that the
working class was inevitably losing its central role in society, and that Left parties could no longer appeal only to this class; a controversial viewpoint in a period of trade union militancy. Hobsbawm supported
Neil Kinnock's transformation of the
British Labour Party from 1983. Until the magazine's closure in 1991, he continued to contribute to ''
Marxism Today''.
Academic life
He was educated at Prinz-Heinrich-
Gymnasium Berlin,
St Marylebone Grammar School (now defunct) and
King's College, Cambridge, where he graduated with a
Ph.D. in history on the
Fabian Society. He was a member of the
Cambridge Apostles.
During
World War II, he served in the
Royal Engineers and the
Royal Army Educational Corps.
In
1947, he became a
lecturer in
history at
Birkbeck College,
University of London.
He was a
visiting professor at
Stanford in the
1960s.
In
1970, he was appointed
professor and in
1978 he was made a Fellow of the
British Academy.
He retired in
1982 but stayed as visiting professor some months a year at
The New School for Social Research in
Manhattan until
1997. He is currently the president of
Birkbeck, University of London and
professor emeritus of The New School for Social Research's
political science department.
He speaks
English,
German,
French,
Spanish and
Italian, and reads
Dutch,
Portuguese and
Catalan.
Works
Hobsbawm has written extensively on many subjects as one of Britain's most prominent historians. As a
Marxist historiographer he has focused on analysis of the "dual revolution" (the political
French revolution and the
industrial British revolution). He sees their effect as a driving force behind the predominant trend towards
liberal capitalism today. Another recurring theme in his work have been
social bandits, a phenomenon that Hobsbawm has tried to place within the confines of relevant societal and historical context thus countering the traditional view of it being a spontaneous and unpredictable form of primitive rebellion.
Outside of his academic historical writing, Hobsbawm has written (under the pseudonym 'Francis Newton' – taken from the name of
Billie Holiday's communist
trumpet player) for the ''
New Statesman'' as a
jazz critic. He has numerous essays published in various intellectual journals, dealing with anything from
barbarity in the
modern age to the troubles of
labour movements and the conflict between
anarchism and
communism.
His most recent publications are the autobiography, ''Interesting Times,'' and ''
Globalisation, Democracy and Terrorism.''
Controversy
Hobsbawm has attracted criticism for his support for communism. According to
Robert Conquest, in an interview with
Canadian cultural critic
Michael Ignatieff on British television in
1994, Hobsbawm responded to the question of whether 20 million deaths would have been justified if the proposed communist
utopia had been created as a consequence by saying "yes"
[2].
But, in his own 1994 book, ''
The Age of Extremes'' he wrote that the deaths were beyond justification (page 393, ISBN 0-349-10671-1):
His book ''The Age of Extremes'' shows a very critical attitude both to the Russia of Stalin and Khrushchev, and to the West in the era of the Korean and Vietnam wars.
Reputation
Hobsbawm has been described as "arguably our greatest living historian -- not only Britain's, but the world's." [''The Spectator,'' quoted on the dust jacket of ''The Age of Capital'']
James Joll wrote in ''The New York Review'' that "Eric Hobsbawm's nineteenth century trilogy is one of the great achievements of historical writing in recent decades." [quoted on the dust jacket of ''The Age of Extremes'']
Partial Publication list
He has written (among other things) the following books:
★ ''Labour's Turning Point : extracts from contemporary sources'' (1948)
★ ''Primitive Rebels : studies in archaic forms of social movement in the 19th and 20th centuries'' (1959)
★ '' (1962)
★ ''Labouring Men : studies in the history of labour'' (1964)
★ ''Pre-Capitalist Economic Formation'' (1965; editor)
★ ''Industry and Empire'' (1968)
★ ''Bandits'' (1969)
★ ''Captain Swing'' (1968; with George Rude)
★ ''Revolutionaries : contemporary essays'' (1973)
★ ''
The Age of Capital, 1848-1875'' (1975)
★ ''The Invention of Tradition'' (1983; editor, with Terence Ranger)
★ ''Workers : worlds of labor'' (1985)
★ ''The Age of Empire'' (1987)
★ ''The Jazz Scene'' (1989)
★ ''Echoes of the Marseillaise: Two Centuries Look Back on the French Revolution'' (1990)
★ ''Nations and Nationalism since 1780 : programme, myth, reality'' (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1990)
★ ''
Age of Extremes : the short twentieth century, 1914-1991'' (1994)
★ ''On History'' (1997)
★ ''Uncommon People : resistance, rebellion and jazz'' (1998)
★ ''On the Edge of the New Century'' (2000)
★ ''Interesting Times : a twentieth-century life'' (2002; autobiography)
★ ''Globalisation, Democracy and Terrorism (2007)
References
★ Campbell, J. "Towards the Great Decision: Review of the ''The Age of Empire''" page 153 from ''Times Literary Supplement'', Volume 4428,
February 12 1988.
★ Cronin, J. "Creating a Marxist Historiography: the Contribution of Hobsbawm" pages 87-109 from ''Radical History Review'', Volume 19, 1979.
★
Genovese, Eugene "The Squandered Century: Review of ''The Age of Extremes''" pages 38-43 from The ''New Republic'', Volume 212,
April 17 1995.
★ Hampson, N. "All for the Better? Review of ''Echoes of the Marseillaise''" page 637 from ''Times Literary Supplement'', Volume 4550,
June 15 1990.
★ Judt, Tony "Downhill All the Way: Review of ''The Age of Extremes''" pages 20-25 from ''New York Review of Books'',
May 25 1995, Volume 49, Issue # 9.
★
Landes, David "The Ubiquitous Bourgeoisie: Review of ''The Age of Capital''" pages 662-664 from ''Times Literary Supplement'', Volume 3873,
June 4 1976.
★ McKibblin, R. "Capitalism out of Control: Review of The ''Age of Extremes''" pages 406 from ''Times Literary Supplement'', Volume 4778,
October 28 1994.
★ Mingay, G.E. "Review of Captain Swing" page 810 from ''English Historical Review'', Volume 85 (337), 1970.
★ Samuel, R. and
Stedman Jones, Gareth (editors) ''Culture, Ideology and Politics: Essays for Eric Hobsbawm'', London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982.
★
Seton-Watson, H. "Manufactured Mythologies: Review of ''The Invention of Tradition''" page 1270 from ''Times Literary Supplement'', Volume 4207,
November 18 1983.
★ Smith, P. "No Vulgar Marxist: Review of ''On History''" page 31 from ''Times Literary Supplement'', Volume 4917,
June 27 1997.
★ Snowman, Daniel "Eric Hobsbawm" page 16– 18 from ''History Today'', Volume 49, Issue 1, January 1999.
★ Thane, P.; Crossick, G. & Floud, R. (editors) ''The Power of the Past: Essays for Eric Hobsbawm'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984.
★ Thane, P. & Lunbeck, E. "Interview with Eric Hobsbawm" pages 29-46 from ''Visions of History'', edited by H. Abelove; B. Blackmar; P. Dimock & J. Schneer, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1983.
★
Weber, Eugen "What Rough Beast?" pages 285-298 from ''Critical Review'', Volume 10, Issue # 2, 1996.
★ Wrigley, Chris "Eric Hobsbawm: an Appreciation" page 2 from ''Bulletin of the Society for the Study of Labour History'', Volume 38, Issue #1, 1984.
External links
★
Eric Hobsbawm: Observer special
★
Article in the Guardian
★
Article in Spartacus.SchoolNet.co.uk
★
Eric Hobsbawm Marxist historian
★
Review of Eric Hobsbawm's memoirs by
Perry Anderson, from the
London Review of Books
★
''Eric Hobsbawm and the working class'' by Norah Carlin and
Ian Birchall (1983)