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After Eden: A Short History of the World

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To solve the problems of the twenty-first century, historian John Charles Chasteen argues that we must first know our shared human story. In After Eden , prominent Latin American historian John Charles Chasteen provides a concise history of world, in which he explores the origins and persistence of the timeless phenomena of humanity’s inhumanity to itself. Where did it come from? Why has it been so prevalent throughout our history? And, most importantly, can we overcome it? Chasteen argues that to do so, we must understand our shared past, and that while much of it is violent, we can look for inspiration from major periods when we strived to live more cooperatively, such as our early foraging periods; to the creation of universal religions and ethical systems; to the birth of the ideas of individual liberty and freedom; to the rise of socialism in response to the massive excesses of global capitalism; to the civil rights and decolonization movements of the twentieth century; and to the environmental and social justice movements of today. 17 illustrations

416 pages, Hardcover

First published November 14, 2023

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John Charles Chasteen

30 books22 followers

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Krista.
1,469 reviews860 followers
November 13, 2023
Once upon a time, humans lived with much less interpersonal violence, without harsh patriarchal domination of women, and without systemic social inequities in general. Life wasn’t easy, but social exploitation and inequity figured much less than in later, civilized societies. That is the “Eden” of this book’s title. Our penchant for regular, organized interpersonal violence, the real worm in this apple, started after Eden, when we settled down, and our populations grew much larger.

After Eden: A Short History of the World is exactly the sort of thing I like: A thoroughly accessible trip through human history, reframing the events I was aware of through the added context of those things I had not known or considered. For example: I had heard before of Spaniards working conquered indigenous people of the Americas to death in silver mines, but I never knew that that was to satisfy Ming China’s need for portable currency in their booming domestic economy; Europe wanted silks and porcelain, but the only thing China wanted in return was silver (until, eventually, England appeared in Chinese ports with their war ships and said, “We don’t care for this trade deficit, old chaps, so we’re going to have to insist you start buying this opium we’re growing in India.”) Author (and professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) John Charles Chasteen makes countless such connections in this book, illustrating how farms led to cities and empires, and eventually, the global market economy of a handful of winners and billions of losers that we see today. Chasteen proves that there is nothing natural or inevitable about the systems we have in place today, making the incredibly urgent point that only by understanding human history can we see a different path forward: one that prioritises the well-being of everyone and the planet we live on. So whether one is interested in seeing a different way forward or simply reading a holistic story of our shared past, After Eden is stuffed with fascinating information, and I loved it all. (Note: I read an ARC through NetGalley and passages quoted may not be in their final forms.)

What spark of genius prompted the world’s first civilizations? Seemingly, none. Little about them suggests a higher form of human life. Essentially, there occurred a confluence and concentration of earlier innovations. Only the aggregate itself was strictly new. Pottery and basketry, woven and dyed clothing, horses and carts, oxen and plows, beer and bread, oil and wine, kingship and state religion — these came together with synergy in urban life. Urban environments exacerbated social inequality but also unleashed cultural dynamism.

I think it would be impossible to summarise what is already a “short history of the world”, but I do want to note some things that I found particularly fascinating/eye-opening. I don’t think I have ever before read that what we call the Agricultural Revolution was a 10 000 year-long “diffuse and accidental” process (No one who lived during this “revolution” experienced rapid change because of it, or even knew that it was happening.) And I've never really considered that from the long ago days of the Persian Empire through the Roman and Ottoman and British, empires formed “the basic model of civilization until only two hundred years ago. It comprises most of what we usually regard as world history.” And this notion of “empire” is primarily what Chasteen is writing about here: stratified, warrior-led, focused on cities but predominantly rural, and founded on the productive power of downtrodden agricultural peasantries. Basically: Everywhere a rolling war machine discovered settled foreigners, they defeated their warriors and said, “You work for us now. Keep on farming and send a portion to our king.” But where the rolling war machine discovered foragers (a way of life no less organised, specialised, or culturally significant than what went on in settlements), the empire-builders would appropriate the land, enslave, scare off, or kill the locals, and feel good about spreading “civilisation” to the dark reaches of the earth.

I see that Chasteen has written several histories of Latin America, and from what he shares here, I would be very interested in reading more on the history of Brazil: From its accidental “discovery” by Portuguese sailors who were blown off course of the weird Atlantic “gyre” that they would employ to slingshot themselves around the southern end of Africa en route to the Silk and Spice Roads, to its transformation into the largest plantation state in the Americas (overseen, again, by the Portuguese — who, it turns out, were the biggest players in the transatlantic slave trade, enslaving half of all people stolen from Africa on their Brazilian sugar and coffee farms), to its more recent history of independence, and flirtations with socialism, monarchy, and military rule (usually with American interference trying to get their preferred guy in).

I have also never read or considered that the Industrial Revolution was initially a very localised event — centred in Northwest England and spreading barely into Scotland (due to the availability of coal, iron, and existing export infrastructure) — and was only copied abroad in Germany, slightly in Belgium and the Netherlands, and overseas, in New England. And it was the Industrial Revolution — and its need to open up new markets — that saw the spread of new empires: England colonised India not just for the resources, but to end their home-spun cotton industry and force the huge Indian market to buy British-made textiles. (This was also the point at which England outlawed slavery because, as Chasteen writes, As British industries saturated market after market in the Americas, slavery had begun to limit profits rather than guarantee them. Free workers would presumably consume more British imports.) Meanwhile, the United States built the Panama Canal in order to open up the Pacific market (“freeing” and then occupying the Philippines; sailing into Japanese ports to insist they join global markets [an idea they took to gladly as the Japanese then built their own warships and spread their own empire into Korea and China]), and as for continental Europe, this initiated the “Scramble for Africa” as newly industrialised Germany and Belgium attempted to spread empires of their own in the “Dark Continent”. (It’s no coincidence that thwarted empires at this stage led to German and Japanese aggression in the ensuing world wars.)

Random interesting facts:

• Many empires employed court eunuchs, but they have never been found in a culture that didn’t descend from herders

• “Homer”, “Confucius”, and the “Buddha” may all be collective creations, where one name stands in for an entire oral tradition

• Swahili was a lingua franca for East African traders, combining Bantu grammatical structures with Arabic vocabulary (and maybe everyone knows that, but it was interesting news to me).

• While bombing North Vietnamese cities, the Americans “used more tonnage than all of World War II’s myriad bombing campaigns put together yet failed to defeat the Vietnamese revolutionaries”

• And a line I admired: Voilà, World War One. Imperialism set it up, nationalism triggered it, industrialism made in hell on Earth.

An enormous part of world history is the raw mistreatment of half of humanity by the other half. Obviously, making common cause with the whole world is going to be hard, but we have to try. What if we teach that all our fates are absolutely intertwined, that no Earthling is an outsider on this blue marble floating in the limitless void, that we do share a common history, and a common destiny, too?

And, of course, this is the point of reading (and writing) a book like After Eden: Humans made society work the way it does today, and we have the ability to change it. The first step is to look back along the path we’ve made and see where we’ve gone wrong; I wish that history read like this in school.
Profile Image for Ryan Stoffield.
103 reviews2 followers
April 29, 2024
I thought that Chasteen did a solid job packing in the key historical movements in a short but dense history of the world. For someone who started the book with the Big Bang theory I don’t understand why he’s so concerned about global warming and aligning himself with Greta Thunberg at the end.

Overall this book does a great job summarizing and then offering key points that you can research and learn about further (I look forward to learning more about the Silk Road)
Profile Image for Corin.
278 reviews1 follower
February 29, 2024
Fascinating, well written, but very very dense. I'm pretty sure I'll have to reread it several times to feel like I got most of the information, but I do feel like I got the concept.
Profile Image for Gregory.
Author 18 books12 followers
May 24, 2024
After Eden is tremendously ambitious, the history of the world in 378 pages. At one point, Chasteen uses the term “lightning overview” (p. 158) and that’s apt. The book is jam-packed. It’s also sobering.

Warfare more or less began when humans started farming, because “farmers became the warriors’ target (p. 45). Villages grew for protection. Later, ethical religions developed that were intended to be universal. Of course, those messages often became corrupted. After 1500, the world’s last forager societies were wiped out by colonization, and the world become more global.

He doesn’t come out and say it, but the historical narrative certainly shows that the process of globalization was terrible for most involved. It was imperialism with religious fervor. Further, as he notes numerous times, everything had a profit motive. Even the settlement of what is now the U.S. was all about repaying investors. Into the 1800s, it was difficult to escape the market economy.

He follows the develop of the notion of “liberty” and “revolution,” along with their dark sides. As he notes, “Liberal states typically dealt with social inequality, not by eliminating it, but by finessing it, often keeping it legally invisible” (p. 288). Meanwhile, nationalism united some, but always in opposition to others.

Chasteen ends with the hope that humans can find common cause in these difficult times. His narrative, however, provides almost no optimism in that regard. The history he presents is pretty even-handed, which also means that he lays out the downside of historical developments. All the genies are out of the bottles, and they’re not going back in.

The book concludes with a number of “we must” and “we need” statements, but unfortunately truly collective and global cooperation is unprecedented in human history. As he reluctantly says, “Selfishness is apparently our default setting” (p. 377).
Profile Image for Răzvan.
Author 28 books80 followers
December 11, 2024
citEști. „Ce-a urmat după Eden”, de John Charles Chasteen: Asigurarea viitorului prin sustenabilitate
John Charles Chasteen, „Ce-a urmat după Eden- O scurtă istorie a lumii”, traducere de Andreea Popescu, Litera, 2024
CITAT „Cinzeci de secole de preamărire de sine și de cârcoteală vor fi greu de depășit.”
TEXT Recitești istoria sau ea te reformulează pe tine? O carte care începe cu asaltul asupra Capitoliului american și se încheie cu invazia lui Putin din Ucraina îți arată că până și poveștile spuse pe scurt au ce să te învețe. În „Ce-a urmat după Eden”, John Charles Chasteen urmărește conflictele care au marcat evoluțiile societăților umane. Și nu numai. Pentru că până și Big Bang-ul devine o parte din povestea care te lasă cu întrebarea ”ce trebuie să învăț ca să îmi pot iubi dușmanul”.
CITAT „Evident, este greu să faci front comun cu lumea întreagă, dar trebuie să încercăm.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHqKR...
Profile Image for Hailey Mullen.
4 reviews
February 9, 2025
This book is a miniature textbook for all of World History. It is organized well into historical time periods and eras from the Paleolithic period to modern present day. While it is concise and helpful for broad topics, you are unlikely to learn anything new about topics you know the basics of. For periods you are unfamiliar with, you are also unlikely to take away much due to the broad strokes used to cover anything mentioned in the book.
170 reviews3 followers
January 11, 2024
I received this book as part of a Goodreads giveaway.

I unexpectedly enjoyed this book. Although it was a bit of a slow reading book, I did find the topics covered in an interesting way. This book gives you a good basic global history. I am not usually much of a history person but I did find myself interested and questioning things because of this book.
Profile Image for Susie.
321 reviews1 follower
August 12, 2024
The ending sentiment is excellent: “An enormous part of world history is the raw mistreatment of half of humanity by the other half. Obviously, making common cause with the whole world is going to be hard, but we have to try. What if we teach our children that all our fates are absolutely intertwined, that no earthling is an outsider on this blue marble floating in the limitless void, that we all share a common history, and a common destiny, too?” (378).
Profile Image for John Kaufmann.
683 reviews67 followers
July 17, 2024
Very interesting read. Essentially about the evolution of Homo sapiens from apeman to our current incarnation. Loaded with information and insight. A few times I lost the main thread, but it shined in the end.
130 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2024
Quick and interesting read. The theme of humanity escaping from Eden to join the possibilities and vices of cities and farming, and Eden being the idealistic hunting gathering lifestyle of nomads is interesting...and debatable.
Profile Image for Lauren Dillon.
49 reviews
June 28, 2025
Great model for developing themed world civ classes - also appreciated the short history chapters versus long, detailed, run-on chapters.
354 reviews5 followers
April 1, 2024
Even a short history of humanity through the ages has a lot of ground to cover. Chasteen has a breezy style which makes it an easy read, although details are left out. The title refers to the theory that humans in the foraging stage of economic development were unlikely to show aggression to other groups. There was general equality even between the sexes. It was the development of agriculture and husbandry that caused people to be tied to one location. This led to cities, social classes, patriarchy, nation states and organized warfare.
This may not be the case. Recent excavations in Siberia show that early humans-built fortifications to defend their fishing holes.

The book moves from one part of the world to another and through time. The European sections are familiar, China, India and Southeast Asia less so. The book does give the reader some interesting areas for study.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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