Eric Hobsbawm Quotes

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  • All professionals, whether physicists, economists or musicians, live by and for peer judgment, even when they are being paid by people who cannot tell the difference.

    Eric Hobsbawm (2014). “The Jazz Scene”, p.296, Faber & Faber
  • The imagined community of millions seems more real as a team of eleven named people.

  • Historians are to nationalism what poppy-growers in Pakistan are to heroin-addicts: we supply the essential raw material for the market.

  • Impotence therefore faces both those who believe in what amounts to a pure, stateless, market capitalism, a sort of international bourgeois anarchism, and those who believe in a planned socialism uncontaminated by private profit-seeking. Both are bankrupt. The future, like the present and the past, belongs to mixed economies in which public and private are braided together in one way or another. But how? That is the problem for everybody today, but especially for people on the left.

    "Socialism has failed. Now capitalism is bankrupt. So what comes next?" by Eric Hobsbawm, www.theguardian.com. April 9, 2009.
  • The paradox of communism in power was that it was conservative.

    Eric J. Hobsbawm (1994). “Age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991”
  • Xenophobia looks like becoming the mass ideology of the 20th-century fin-de-siecle.

    "Divided Europeans: Understanding Ethnicities in Conflict". Book edited by Tim Allen and John Eade (p. 41), June 30, 1999.
  • Nations without a past are contradictions in terms. What makes a nation is the past, what justifies one nation against others is the past, and historians are the people who produce it.

    "Mapping the Nation". Book edited by Gopal Balakrishnan and Benedict Anderson, 1996.
  • Human beings are not efficiently designed for a capitalist system of production.

    Eric J. Hobsbawm (1994). “Age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991”
  • He[Napoleon] had destroyed only one thing: the Jacobin Revolution, the dream of equality, liberty and fraternity, and of the people rising in its majesty to shake off oppression. It was a more powerful myth than his, for after his fall it was this, and not his memory, which inspired the revolutions of the nineteenth century, even in his own country.

  • N. S. Khrushchev established his supremacy in the U.S.S.R. after post-Stalinist alarums and excursions (1958-64). This admirable rough diamond, a believer in reform and peaceful coexistence, who incidentally emptied Stalin's concentration camps, dominated the international scene in the next few years. He was also perhaps the only peasant boy ever to rule a major state

  • Many years later, another Marxian rephrased this as the choice between socialism and barbarity. Which of these will prevail is a question which the twenty-first century must be left to answer.

    Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Eric Hobsbawm (2012). “The Communist Manifesto: A Modern Edition”, p.28, Verso Books
  • There is not much that even the most socially responsible scientists can do as individuals, or even as a group, about the social consequences of their activities.

    1970 In the NewYork Review of Books, 18 Nov.
  • No serious historian of nations and nationalism can be a committed political nationalist... Nationalism requires too much belief in what is patently not so.

    "Nations and Nationalism Since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality". Book by Eric Hobsbawm (p. 12), May 24, 1990.
  • Telephone and telegraph were better means of communication than the holy man's telepathy

    Eric J. Hobsbawm (1994). “Age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991”
  • (Carmine Crocco) A farm-labourer and cowherd, had joined the Bourbon army, killed a comrade in a brawl, deserted and lived as an outlaw for ten years. He joined the liberal insurgents in 1860 in the hope of an amnesty for his past offences, and subsequently became the most formidable guerilla chief and leader of men on the Bourbon side.

    Eric J. Hobsbawm (1985). “Bandits”
  • As the global expansion of Indian and Chinese restaurants suggests, xenophobia is directed against foreign people, not foreign cultural imports.

    "Mapping the Nation". Book edited by Gopal Balakrishnan and Benedict Anderson, 1996.
  • It is a melancholy illusion of those who write books and articles that the printed word survives. Alas, it rarely does.

    Eric Hobsbawm (2011). “How To Change The World: Tales of Marx and Marxism”, p.126, Hachette UK
  • It seems that American patriotism measures itself against an outcast group. The right Americans are the right Americans because they're not like the wrong Americans, who are not really Americans.

  • The most lasting and universal consequence of the French revolution is the metric system

    Eric J. Hobsbawm (1994). “Age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991”
  • Utopianism is probably a necessary social device for generating the superhuman efforts without which no major revolution is achieved.

    Eric J. Hobsbawm (1971). “Primitive Rebels: Studies in Archaic Forms of Social Movement in the 19th and 20th Centuries”, p.60, Manchester University Press
  • The greatest cruelties of our century have been the impersonal cruelties of remote decision, of system and routine, especially when they could be justified as regrettable operational necessity.

    "The Age of Extremes". Book by Eric Hobsbawm, p. 414, 2004.
  • The only certain thing about the future is that it will surprise even those who have seen furthest into it.

    "Staking Out The Globe" by David M. Kennedy, www.nytimes.com. February 21, 1988.
  • It is one of the ironies of this strange century that the most lasting results of the October revolution, whose object was the global overthrow of capitalism, was to save its antagonist, both in war and in peace - that is to say, by providing it with the incentive, fear, to reform itself after the Second World War, and, by establishing the popularity of economic planning, furnishing it with some of the procedures for its reform

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