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Eric R. Wolf

Europe and the People Without History

With a New Preface.
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$25.95, £14.95 paperback
978-0-520-04898-0
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534 pages, 6 x 9 inches,
December 1982, Available worldwide
Categories: Anthropology; History

"Wolf's intention is to show that European expansion not only transformed the historical trajectory of non-European societies but also reconstituted their historical accounts of their societies before European intervention. . . . His historical sweep and analytic breadth are astounding, and he gives approximately equal weight to historical 'winners' and 'losers.'" —Michael S. Kimmel, American Journal of Sociology

"Wolf's intention is to explain the development and nature of the chains of cause and consequence which linked populations in the post-1400 world. The outcome is a tightly structured and elegant book." —Oceania

"The work of a powerful theoretical intelligence, but one informed by a lived sense of social realities." —Times Literary Supplement

"In this big and important book, Eric Wolf begins and ends with the assertion that anthropology must pay more attention to history. . . . It is with pleasure, then, that one reads a critical analysis that rejects pseudo-historical oppositions and explores with such care the historical processes by which primitive and peasant pasts have become a fundamentally altered primitive, peasant, and proletarian present." —William Roseberry, Dialectical Anthropology

"Wolf has created a history of connection rather than one of segregation. . . . This absorbing and stimulating book . . . provides a convincing and, dare I say, new perspective. . . . By emphasizing a common past, Wolf moves away from weary polarities of active 'white' centre and passive 'non-white' periphery and suggests both a more complex and a more informed sense of the relationship between Europe and the rest of the world."—Ben Jay, European Update

"Wolf's empirical knowledge is exceptionally wide. . . . He relies on a skillful selection of phenomena in time and space that are reasonably representative of the totality. . . . The book is very well written and with a profoundly human touch."—Magnus Mörner, Ethnos
PREFACE (1997)
PREFACE (1982)
PART ONE: CONNECTIONS
Introduction
The World in 1400
Modes of Production
Europe, Prelude to Expansion
PART TWO: IN SEARCH OF WEALTH
Iberians in America
The Fur Trade
Trade and Conquest in the Orient
PART THREE: CAPITALISM
Industrial Revolution
Crisis and Differentiation in Capitalism
The Movement of Commodities
The New Laborers
AFTERWORD
BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
Eric R. Wolf is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology Emeritus, Herbert H. Lehman College and the Graduate School of the City University of New York.
First J. I. Staley Prize, The School of American Research
Kevin Lynch Award, Department of Urban Studies and Planning of the School of Architecture and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology