Jack Goody (1919–2015)
Author of The Theft of History
About the Author
Jack Goody is Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology in the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of St John's College
Series
Works by Jack Goody
The Logic of Writing and the Organization of Society (Studies in Literacy, the Family, Culture and the State) (1986) 134 copies, 3 reviews
The Interface between the Written and the Oral (Studies in Literacy, the Family, Culture and the State) (1987) 100 copies
The Development of the Family and Marriage in Europe (Past and Present Publications) (1983) — Author; Foreword, some editions — 94 copies
Family and Inheritance: Rural Society in Western Europe, 1200-1800 (Past and Present Publications) (1976) — Editor; Contributor — 29 copies
The expansive moment : the rise of social anthropology in Britain and Africa, 1918-1970 (1995) 21 copies
The Developmental Cycle in Domestic Groups (Cambridge Papers in Social Anthropology) (1958) — Author — 19 copies
Changing Social Structure in Ghana: Essays in the Comparative Sociology of a New State and an Old Tradition (1975) 7 copies
Death, Property and the Ancestors: A Study of the Mortuary Customs of the Lodagaa of West Africa (1962) 4 copies
Mit, Rituel ve Soz 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Goody, John Rankine
- Other names
- Goody, Jack (Surnom)
- Birthdate
- 1919-07-27
- Date of death
- 2015-07-16
- Gender
- male
- Education
- St Albans School
University of Cambridge (St John's College) (BA ∙ PhD - Anthropology) - Occupations
- professor emeritus
anthropologist - Organizations
- University of Cambridge
- Awards and honors
- University of Cambridge (Fellow ∙ St John's College)
Knight Bachelor - Relationships
- Mitchell, Juliet (3rd wife)
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Hammersmith, London, England, UK
- Place of death
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
In a trio of books written during the last decade (this one, plus The Theft of History and The Eurasian Miracle), the cultural anthropologist Jack Goody has put forth a critique of the occidentalist bias in European historical writing. Like any good global historiography, Goody’s critique draws attention to problems in periodization, transregional analysis and the assumed distinctions between societies, and the relative merits of diffusion or evolution as explanations for change over time. show more This volume proposes several hypotheses towards a reconsideration of the social and cultural practices frequently taken to explain the development of industrial capitalism in the West. For those interested in global history, The East in the West is a fine example of the explanatory power accorded to economic culture since the publication of Fernand Braudel’s The Mediterranean in 1949.
Goody’s approach to the problematique of East v. West is to recognize that the major societies of the East are heirs to the same Bronze Age urban revolutions as the West. The differences among the major societies of Eurasia must be seen as diverging from a common base, writes Goody, and so their literate, mercantile sectors acquired much the same potential for commercial and cultural development. Recognizing the common heritage of the Bronze Age means that neither deep, continuing cultural features nor any ‘necessary’ sequence of events support the perception of a permanent pre-eminence for the West. Indeed, since the Bronze Age, there has been an oscillation between periods of Eastern advantage and triumph and periods of Western advantage and triumph. According to Goody, “we need to ask on a much more specific level what factors enabled the East to advance at one period and in one sphere and the West at others.”
Through a succinct, suggestive analysis of some of these specific factors (mercantile bookkeeping, kinship and capital, forms of labor, etc.), Goody develops his argument that neither rationality, individualism, nor a propensity to entrepreneurial risk-taking were characteristics unique to European culture. The belief that rationality as a method began with the classical Greeks has been undermined by the work of Jean Bottéro and others on empiricism, deduction, and logic in ancient Mesopotamia—and Goody provides sources on the forms of instrumental rationality in China, India and the Middle East (at Baghdad’s House of Wisdom, for instance) before the so-called Age of Reason in the West. It is also good to remember that the conquests of Alexander spread Greek syllogistic methods to the East before they arrived in Europe.
"The West has tended to misunderstand even itself in drawing too sharp a contrast between our individualism, our rationality, our nuclear family, and their collectivism, their extended families." These differences are matters of degree rather than of kind, writes Goody, and if we are to absorb the lessons of the East, they do not appear to have much to do with the onset of modernization.
The historiography of the West frequently locates the birthplace of capitalism at Venice, with mercantile activity around the Mediterranean as the necessary predecessor to the industrial revolution of the late 18th century. But, notes Goody, there were equivalent forms of economic activity in India, China, and Japan, equally open to the take-off provided by the investment of fixed capital in the factory system. European historians long misunderstood the scale and scope of the Indian Ocean trade that linked China, the Philippines and Moluccas, India, Persia, Arabia and Africa, much of it carried out by independent merchants organized in guilds. The network of external trade connected to a lively internal market, which required commercial institutions as well as ties to the political and administrative establishments. The presence of contract law and banking in Muslim territories and joint-stock companies and commercial insurance in Mughal India signaled the advent of increasingly complex mercantile economies throughout the region. Upon arrival in India, the British saw active merchant capital (in the processing and distribution of food products and textiles), a money economy, production for the market, and a range of thriving craft industries, which served as a link between the village and long-distance trade. Largely through her own efforts, says Goody, India was approaching the manufacturing stage in the development of capitalism, but the coming of the industrial revolution in England set back the Indian economy and prevented it from developing.
To speak of the birth of commercial activities in the West during the Middle Ages represents a misunderstanding deriving in part from the relative backwardness of Europe after the end of Roman hegemony. What we witness in the later Middle Ages is not so much a birth but a rebirth, or recovery, according to Goody. (What was new was the range of action, especially after Columbus.) Western historians have tended to underplay the achievements of the East during the Middle Ages at a time when it was often Europe that could be considered backward, and to attribute advances in the West to permanent, deep-seated, structural factors.
Ultimately, the holistic notion of culture or social structure (so attractive to social scientists, at least since Max Weber) has failed to account for the earlier imbalance or the swings of the pendulum. “To speak of mentalities or outlooks is to place cognitive processes at the level of abilities rather than capacities,” writes Jack Goody, “and therefore to underestimate the rapidity or even the possibilities of change.” What should be most sobering for the inhabitants of western societies is Goody’s point that the comparative advantage for either East or West has always been temporary. That goes for the lead held by the West in our present, which will one day be the past. show less
Goody’s approach to the problematique of East v. West is to recognize that the major societies of the East are heirs to the same Bronze Age urban revolutions as the West. The differences among the major societies of Eurasia must be seen as diverging from a common base, writes Goody, and so their literate, mercantile sectors acquired much the same potential for commercial and cultural development. Recognizing the common heritage of the Bronze Age means that neither deep, continuing cultural features nor any ‘necessary’ sequence of events support the perception of a permanent pre-eminence for the West. Indeed, since the Bronze Age, there has been an oscillation between periods of Eastern advantage and triumph and periods of Western advantage and triumph. According to Goody, “we need to ask on a much more specific level what factors enabled the East to advance at one period and in one sphere and the West at others.”
Through a succinct, suggestive analysis of some of these specific factors (mercantile bookkeeping, kinship and capital, forms of labor, etc.), Goody develops his argument that neither rationality, individualism, nor a propensity to entrepreneurial risk-taking were characteristics unique to European culture. The belief that rationality as a method began with the classical Greeks has been undermined by the work of Jean Bottéro and others on empiricism, deduction, and logic in ancient Mesopotamia—and Goody provides sources on the forms of instrumental rationality in China, India and the Middle East (at Baghdad’s House of Wisdom, for instance) before the so-called Age of Reason in the West. It is also good to remember that the conquests of Alexander spread Greek syllogistic methods to the East before they arrived in Europe.
"The West has tended to misunderstand even itself in drawing too sharp a contrast between our individualism, our rationality, our nuclear family, and their collectivism, their extended families." These differences are matters of degree rather than of kind, writes Goody, and if we are to absorb the lessons of the East, they do not appear to have much to do with the onset of modernization.
The historiography of the West frequently locates the birthplace of capitalism at Venice, with mercantile activity around the Mediterranean as the necessary predecessor to the industrial revolution of the late 18th century. But, notes Goody, there were equivalent forms of economic activity in India, China, and Japan, equally open to the take-off provided by the investment of fixed capital in the factory system. European historians long misunderstood the scale and scope of the Indian Ocean trade that linked China, the Philippines and Moluccas, India, Persia, Arabia and Africa, much of it carried out by independent merchants organized in guilds. The network of external trade connected to a lively internal market, which required commercial institutions as well as ties to the political and administrative establishments. The presence of contract law and banking in Muslim territories and joint-stock companies and commercial insurance in Mughal India signaled the advent of increasingly complex mercantile economies throughout the region. Upon arrival in India, the British saw active merchant capital (in the processing and distribution of food products and textiles), a money economy, production for the market, and a range of thriving craft industries, which served as a link between the village and long-distance trade. Largely through her own efforts, says Goody, India was approaching the manufacturing stage in the development of capitalism, but the coming of the industrial revolution in England set back the Indian economy and prevented it from developing.
To speak of the birth of commercial activities in the West during the Middle Ages represents a misunderstanding deriving in part from the relative backwardness of Europe after the end of Roman hegemony. What we witness in the later Middle Ages is not so much a birth but a rebirth, or recovery, according to Goody. (What was new was the range of action, especially after Columbus.) Western historians have tended to underplay the achievements of the East during the Middle Ages at a time when it was often Europe that could be considered backward, and to attribute advances in the West to permanent, deep-seated, structural factors.
Ultimately, the holistic notion of culture or social structure (so attractive to social scientists, at least since Max Weber) has failed to account for the earlier imbalance or the swings of the pendulum. “To speak of mentalities or outlooks is to place cognitive processes at the level of abilities rather than capacities,” writes Jack Goody, “and therefore to underestimate the rapidity or even the possibilities of change.” What should be most sobering for the inhabitants of western societies is Goody’s point that the comparative advantage for either East or West has always been temporary. That goes for the lead held by the West in our present, which will one day be the past. show less
Obra crítica que examina cómo Europa se ha apropiado de la narrativa de la historia universal, imponiendo un modelo eurocéntrico que relega las aportaciones de Asia, África y otras civilizaciones. Goody desmonta los sesgos de la historiografía occidental y propone una lectura global y comparativa del desarrollo histórico.
The Theft of History is a synoptic work that attempts to deconstruct and analyze the systematic abuse of historical memory in order to justify European colonialism and Imperialism over the last four centuries.
Central to the argument is the idea that Europe developed Sui Generis from the rest of the world, almost hermetically sealed off from the scientific, political, cultural and religious influences of Africa, Asia, and indeed the whole world.
In so doing, western historians defined the show more continent as having exceptional and unique qualities, immaculately conceived from the days of Classical Greece, despite the contradictions that had to be glossed over in the process.
Interlaced through this was the attempt to define Europeans as biologically distinct and superior to other peoples, and thereby justify their domination over the entire world.
Goody dissects the historical record of these attempts, and most damningly of all, often use the words of the very individuals who participated in these fraudulent notions to state his case against them.
He describes the attempts by Imperialist historians and philosophers to downplay, obfuscate and sometimes even distort the historical record of the numerous and profound ways in which Africa and Asia influence European culture and thought, starting from the days of Pre-classical Greece to 19th century.
Having said that those who already accept the notions of Western exceptionalism are hardly going to be swayed by this book.
To those willing to accept validity of such a critique to begin with, there are things that may strike you as new and refreshing. show less
Central to the argument is the idea that Europe developed Sui Generis from the rest of the world, almost hermetically sealed off from the scientific, political, cultural and religious influences of Africa, Asia, and indeed the whole world.
In so doing, western historians defined the show more continent as having exceptional and unique qualities, immaculately conceived from the days of Classical Greece, despite the contradictions that had to be glossed over in the process.
Interlaced through this was the attempt to define Europeans as biologically distinct and superior to other peoples, and thereby justify their domination over the entire world.
Goody dissects the historical record of these attempts, and most damningly of all, often use the words of the very individuals who participated in these fraudulent notions to state his case against them.
He describes the attempts by Imperialist historians and philosophers to downplay, obfuscate and sometimes even distort the historical record of the numerous and profound ways in which Africa and Asia influence European culture and thought, starting from the days of Pre-classical Greece to 19th century.
Having said that those who already accept the notions of Western exceptionalism are hardly going to be swayed by this book.
To those willing to accept validity of such a critique to begin with, there are things that may strike you as new and refreshing. show less
A bit of a disappointment, because I really expected more from this. That is, of course, because I have already read so many things in the same genre. The English social anthropologist Jack Goody (1919-2015) published his most meritorious works in the 1960s and 1970s, and this dates from 2005, when he was already 86 years old. Thus it is based on decades of experience in the study of non-Western societies. This is also evident from the erudition Goody displays: without much fuss, he show more juxtaposes classic Western achievements with the experiences and realizations of peoples and states from Asia and Africa (America is a notable absentee).
And of course, he is right to mercilessly dissect the Western sense of superiority and expose its weaknesses and inconsistencies. However, I get the impression that in his zeal he falls into the other extreme, remaining blind to domains where the West did indeed make a difference. On top of that, this book gives a rather unstructured impression and frequently lapses into very theoretical discourse. It also doesn't help that he draws many of his historical insights from Vere Gordon Childe, a highly meritorious Australian archaeologist-historian, but one who was active in the years 1920–1950, so almost a century ago. And finally, his argumentation is not always very convincing on certain points. More on that in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1814379748 show less
And of course, he is right to mercilessly dissect the Western sense of superiority and expose its weaknesses and inconsistencies. However, I get the impression that in his zeal he falls into the other extreme, remaining blind to domains where the West did indeed make a difference. On top of that, this book gives a rather unstructured impression and frequently lapses into very theoretical discourse. It also doesn't help that he draws many of his historical insights from Vere Gordon Childe, a highly meritorious Australian archaeologist-historian, but one who was active in the years 1920–1950, so almost a century ago. And finally, his argumentation is not always very convincing on certain points. More on that in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1814379748 show less
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