Against the Grain

A Deep History of the Earliest States

by James C. Scott

Like another book with the same name, James C. Scott’s Against the Grain argues that the “just so” story of humans’ progression from barbarians to civilized agriculturalists is not the success story we might have thought. Instead, he notes that the early states involved a kind of enclosure—often quite literally, with walls built more to keep the farmers in than the barbarians out. And rather than benefitting from that enclosure, those early citizens suffered greatly: both in terms of their health (agrarians were smaller and more malnourished, especially the women) and in terms of their freedom, which was dramatically curtailed. (Many of the early states had slave populations that exceeded the number of peasants.) In addition to troubling that just-so story, I think Scott’s analysis gives us something else to think with: why should we imagine the states that exist today to be any more free than their predecessors? And what does that mean for us?

Publisher
Yale University Press
Year
2017
Collections
Food
Liberation
Earth
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Selected essays

Writing essays & notes

  1. Umyazu

    Reading is the art of attention.

Reading books

  1. Kraken

    by China Miéville

A creative space to practice the future →