The Year 1000: When Explorers Connected the World and Globalization Began (2020) by Valerie Hansen8/25/2022
The Year 1000: When Explorers Connected the World—and Globalization Began by Valerie Hansen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars Is That All There Is? Or, Why the Year 1000? In The Year 1000: When Explorers Connected the World and Globalization Began (2020), Valerie Hansen is out to prove that “The year 1000 marked the start of globalization. This is when trade routes took shape all around the world that allowed goods, technologies, religions, and people to leave home and go somewhere new.” She also wants to connect how cultures strategized globalization around 1000 with how we are dealing with it today: “living in a world shaped by the events of the year 1000, we are wrestling with exactly the same challenges that people faced for the first time then: should we cooperate with our neighbors, trade with them, allow them to settle in our countries, and grant them freedom of worship when they live in our society? Should we try to keep them out? Should we retaliate against the people who become wealthy through trade? Should we try to make new products that copy technologies we haven't yet mastered? Finally, will globalization make us more aware of who we are, or will it destroy our identity?” But although her book is mostly interesting, it is a little short and thin and doesn’t fully fulfill its “goal … to address those questions.” Hansen starts with an overview of the world in the year 1000, and then writes chapters on the Norse in North America (“Go West, Young Viking”), central, south, and north American cultures (“The Pan American Highways of 1000”), the Rus in eastern Europe (“European Slaves”), African and Islamic traders and cultures (“The World's Richest Man”), Muslims and Buddhists in Asia (“Central Asia Splits in Two”), and 11th-century China (“The Most Globalized Place on Earth”). Throughout, she relates interesting details, for example: On the need for blood to be given to the Mayan gods, for which leaders drew stingray stingers through their penises. (Ouch!) On the importance of coins found in shipwrecks and burial mounds etc. when no written documentation exists, because coins reveal who was trading with whom and how much they traded with them. (Duh!) On the Tale of Genji revealing the importance of aromatics from Arabia and Southeast Asia to the Song Empire and to Heian-era Japanese aristocrats like Genji, who made his own scents by combining different elements, was famed for his particular fragrance which could be smelt long after he left a room, and held a fragrance making contest at the birthday party of his princess daughter. (Cool!) On the 100-meter-long Chinese kilns like dragons rising up mountain sides, the hottest kilns in the world, using up to 1000 workers and making 20,000 or more pieces of ceramics per firing. (Wow!) Here is an example of Hansen’s straightforward (not wholly stirring) writing and her connecting approach to history: “Like Wikipedia entries today, the Chinese descriptions of foreign lands followed a set formula, which included the country’s most important products, the local currency system... and a chronological account of the most important events in the history of that place.” Some of Hansen’s connections between then and now seem a bit forced, like when she says that the conflict between the Venetian, Genoese, and Pisan merchants of Constantinople and the locals of that city were like that between the haves and have nots of today (the 1% and everyone else). Surely much of the conflict in Constantinople back then was because the Latins were not Greek and were not Eastern Orthodox and not just because they had more wealth? Anyway, it is a short book, and I wished for more depth and detail. I didn’t learn as much from it as I’d hoped I would. She gives etymologies that I’d learned from other history books, like slaves coming from the word Slav, because so many of them were enslaved back then. One was new to me: Blue Tooth connectivity deriving from King Harold Bluetooth because he united Denmark and Norway. Her thesis—that people were trading globally well before the 1500s and that many of the trade routes and religious cultural blocks and dynamics of today’s globalized world started by the year 1000 is convincing, but… but then what? A question: Why the year 1000? Given the varying calendars and methods of counting years in the different cultures back then, why not start with, say, 900? In her chapters Hansen often travels hundreds of years before or after 1000. I think it’s OK when she mentions the 1500s and European exploration/exploitation etc., because she’s explaining that they used preexisting trade routes from hundreds of years earlier while cutting out local middlemen and generally imposing their wills on locals, but sometimes one suspects that you could say globalization started much earlier than 1000. Referring at one point to ceramic competition between Arab and Chinese makers circa the year 726, Hansen herself says, “Globalization operated then just as it does now.” Another question: Is that all there is? OK, so globalization started say, in the year 1000, much earlier than we usually imagine, but I don’t think Hansen answers the questions she poses in her Prologue about what early globalization has to tell us about contemporary globalization. In her Epilogue, she concludes that the most important lesson we can get from looking at globalization in the year 1000 is how to react to the unfamiliar: do you open to and learn from it or do you close to and attack it? Doing the former is more likely to bring beneficial results for your culture than doing the latter. That conclusion is underwhelming. The reader Cynthia Farrell speaks clearly but has some dodgy pronunciations: as of products (produx), objects (objex), Kyoto (Ki-oto), Iraq and Iran (Eye-raq and Eye-ran). Even if we don’t mind that kind of thing, her delivery is rather monotonous, rendering Hansen’s prose rather bland. When Hansen starts a sentence with “Interestingly,” or “Curiously,” Farrell doesn't express interest or curiosity. View all my reviews
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