Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm,
CH, FBA, (born 9 June 1917) is a
British Marxist historian and
author, one of the most influential British historians of the late twentieth century.
Life
Hobsbawm was born in 1917 in
Alexandria,
Egypt, to Leopold Percy Obstbaum and Nelly Grün, both
Jewish, and he grew up in
Vienna and
Berlin. A clerical error at birth altered his surname from Obstbaum to Hobsbawm.
[Maya Jaggi. ] Although the family lived in
German-speaking
countries, his parents spoke 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.
Hobsbawm married twice. His first wife was Muriel Seaman, whom he married in 1943 and divorced in 1951. His second marriage was to Marlene Schwartz, with whom he has two children,
Julia Hobsbawm and
Andy Hobsbawm. Julia is chief executive of Hobsbawm Media and Marketing and a visiting professor of
public relations at the
College of Communication,
University of the Arts London. He also has a son, Joshua, from a previous relationship. He is a
Marxist and 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. He was appointed a
Companion of Honour in 1998. In 2003 he was awarded the
Balzan Prize for European History since 1900 "For his brilliant analysis of the troubled history of twentieth-century Europe and for his ability to combine in-depth historical research with great literary talent".
Politics
Hobsbawm joined the
Sozialistischer Schülerbund (Association of Socialist Pupils), an offspring of the German
Communist Youth KJVD, in Berlin in 1931 and the
Communist party in 1936, supporting both the
Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact and the Soviet invasion of
Finland in 1939. 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. Yet he denounced USSR crime and abuses as early as 1956 (
Daily Worker, November 18, 1956). In the same article he characterized the Polish and the Hungarian uprisings as "revolts of workers and intellectuals against bureaucracies and pseudo-communist political systems". Writing in the
Daily Worker in late 1956, Hobsbawm argued that "Whilst 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."
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 cessation of publication in 1991, he contributed to the magazine
Marxism Today. Since the 1960s his politics have taken a more moderate turn, as Hobsbawm came to recognize that his hopes were unlikely to be realized, and no longer advocates "socialist systems of the Soviet type". Yet, he remains firmly entrenched on the left, and thinks the long-term outlooks for humanity are 'bleak'.
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 became reader in 1959, professor between 1970-1982 and an
Emeritus professor of history 1982. He as a fellow between 1949-1955 at
King's College, Cambridge.
He was a
visiting professor at
Stanford in the 1960s. In 1970, he was appointed
professor and in 1978 he became a Fellow of the
British Academy. He is an honorary Foreign Member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
He retired in 1982 but stayed as
visiting professor at
The New School for Social Research in
Manhattan between 1984-1997. He is currently President of
Birkbeck, University of London and
Professor Emeritus in The New School for Social Research in the
Political Science department. He speaks
English,
German,
French,
Spanish and
Italian, and reads
Dutch,
Portuguese and
Catalan. One of Hobsbawm's interests is the development of
traditions. His work is a study of their
social 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.
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 has been
social banditry, 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 a regular column (under the pseudonym 'Francis Newton' – taken from the name of
Billie Holiday's communist trumpet player,
Frankie Newton) for the
New Statesman as a
jazz critic, and time to time over popular music such as with his "Beatles and before" article. 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 (2002),
Globalisation, Democracy and Terrorism (2007) and
On Empire (2008).
Reputation
Thirty years ago Hobsbawm was described as "arguably our greatest living historian — not only Britain's, but the world's."
James Joll wrote in
The New York Review of Books that "Eric Hobsbawm's nineteenth century trilogy is one of the great achievements of historical writing in recent decades."
Tony Judt, director of the Erich Maria Remarque Institute at
New York University, believes that Hobsbawm's tendency to disparage any nationalist movement as passing and irrational weakens his grasp of parts of the 20th century. Judt however, also wrote that "Hobsbawm is a cultural folk hero. His fame is well deserved. Hobsbawm doesn't just know more than other historians, he writes better, too." In
Neal Ascherson's view "Eric's Jewishness increased his sensitivity about nationalism. He's the original happy cosmopolitan, who's benefited from being able to move freely."
Honours
- 1973 Honorary Fellow, King's College, Cambridge
- 1978 Fellow of the British Academy
- 1998 Companion of Honour.
Public Criticism
Hobsbawm has attracted criticism for his support for communism, even after the Hungarian and Czechoslovak rebellions against Soviet rule that were put down with such force. Also,
Robert Conquest has claimed that in an interview with
Canadian author and politician
Michael Ignatieff on British television in 1994, Hobsbawm responded to the question of whether 20 million deaths may have been justified if the proposed communist
utopia had been created as a consequence by saying "yes".
More specifically, Hobsbawm reportedly said that "in a period in which, as you might imagine, mass murder and mass suffering are absolutely universal, the chance of a new world being born in great suffering would still have been worth backing". He stressed that since the utopia had not been created, the sacrifices were in fact not justified - a point that he also emphasized in his own 1994 book,
The Age of Extremes:
Partial Publication list
- The New Century: In Conversation with Antonio Polito
- The Communist Manifesto: a Modern Edition by E. J. Hobsbawm, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels
- Twilight of the Nation State: Globalisation, Chaos and War by Prem Shankar Jha, E. J. Hobsbawm
- J. D. Bernal: A Life in Science and Politics by Brenda Swann, Francis Aprahamian, E. J. Hobsbawm
- Behind the Times: Decline and Fall of the Twentieth-century Avant-gardes
- Art and Power by Dawn Ades, David Elliott, E. J. Hobsbawm, Boyd Whyte Iain, Tim Benton
- Politics for a Rational Left: Political Writing, 1977-1988
- The History of Marxism: Marxism in Marx's Day 1978
- 1968 Magnum Throughout the World
- Italian Road to Socialism: An Interview by Eric Hobsbawm with Giorgio ...
- Culture, ideology, and politics : essays for Eric Hobsbawm