Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
by Jared Diamond
|
Book Reviews
Amazon.com
Jared Diamond's Collapse: How Societies
Choose to Fail or Succeed is the glass-half-empty
follow-up to his Pulitzer Prize-winning Guns,
Germs, and Steel. While Guns,
Germs, and Steel explained the geographic and environmental
reasons why some human populations have flourished,
Collapse uses the same factors to examine why
ancient societies, including the Anasazi of the American
Southwest and the Viking colonies of Greenland, as well
as modern ones such as Rwanda, have fallen apart. Not
every collapse has an environmental origin, but an eco-meltdown
is often the main catalyst, he argues, particularly
when combined with society's response to (or disregard
for) the coming disaster. Still, right from the outset
of Collapse, the author makes clear that this
is not a mere environmentalist's diatribe. He begins
by setting the book's main question in the small communities
of present-day Montana as they face a decline in living
standards and a depletion of natural resources. Once-vital
mines now leak toxins into the soil, while prion diseases
infect some deer and elk and older hydroelectric dams
have become decrepit. On all these issues, and particularly
with the hot-button topic of logging and wildfires,
Diamond writes with equanimity.
Because he's addressing such significant issues within
a vast span of time, Diamond can occasionally speak
too briefly and assume too much, and at times his shorthand
remarks may cause careful readers to raise an eyebrow.
But in general, Diamond provides fine and well-reasoned
historical examples, making the case that many times,
economic and environmental concerns are one and the
same. With Collapse, Diamond hopes to jog our
collective memory to keep us from falling for false
analogies or forgetting prior experiences, and thereby
save us from potential devastations to come. While it
might seem a stretch to use medieval Greenland and the
Maya to convince a skeptic about the seriousness of
global warming, it's exactly this type of cross-referencing
that makes Collapse so compelling. --Jennifer
Buckendorff
Publisher's Weekly
Starred Review. In his Pulitzer Prizewinning
bestseller Guns,
Germs, and Steel, geographer Diamond laid out a
grand view of the organic roots of human civilizations
in flora, fauna, climate and geology. That vision takes
on apocalyptic overtones in this fascinating comparative
study of societies that have, sometimes fatally, undermined
their own ecological foundations. Diamond examines storied
examples of human economic and social collapse, and
even extinction, including Easter Island, classical
Mayan civilization and the Greenland Norse. He explores
patterns of population growth, overfarming, overgrazing
and overhunting, often abetted by drought, cold, rigid
social mores and warfare, that lead inexorably to vicious
circles of deforestation, erosion and starvation prompted
by the disappearance of plant and animal food sources.
Extending his treatment to contemporary environmental
trouble spots, from Montana to China to Australia, he
finds today's global, technologically advanced civilization
very far from solving the problems that plagued primitive,
isolated communities in the remote past. At times Diamond
comes close to a counsel of despair when contemplating
the environmental havoc engulfing our rapidly industrializing
planet, but he holds out hope at examples of sustainability
from highland New Guinea's age-old but highly diverse
and efficient agriculture to Japan's rigorous program
of forest protection and, less convincingly, in recent
green consumerism initiatives. Diamond is a brilliant
expositor of everything from anthropology to zoology,
providing a lucid background of scientific lore to support
a stimulating, incisive historical account of these
many declines and falls. Readers will find his book
an enthralling, and disturbing, reminder of the indissoluble
links that bind humans to nature.
Please consider joining our free
online book discussion and reading group!
Collapse:
How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond
|