E.P. Thompson (1924-1993) was a British historian, socialist activist, and peace campaigner. His full name was Edward Palmer Thompson. He was born in Oxford into a family with strong connections to India: his father had been a Methodist missionary and a friend of Rabindranath Tagore, and Thompson grew up with an internationalist outlook. He studied at Cambridge, served in the Second World War in Italy, and then worked as an adult education tutor for the Workers Educational Association in Yorkshire, teaching history to working-class communities. This experience of teaching history to people whose own ancestors rarely appeared in it profoundly shaped his work. He left the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1956 following the Soviet invasion of Hungary and became one of the founders of the New Left in Britain. His monumental work The Making of the English Working Class, published in 1963, transformed how historians thought about their subject. He was also a leading figure in the European Nuclear Disarmament movement in the 1980s. He died in 1993.
Thompson matters because he transformed what history was about and who it was for. Before his generation of social historians, history was largely the history of states, rulers, armies, and elites: what kings decided, what governments enacted, what battles were won or lost. Thompson argued that this was not history but the history of one part of humanity, and that the lives, experiences, and struggles of ordinary working people were equally worthy of historical inquiry and equally important for understanding how the world had come to be as it is. His concept of rescuing people from the enormous condescension of posterity, one of the most memorable phrases in historical writing, captured what he was trying to do: restore to the record the people who had been forgotten or dismissed. He also showed that working-class people were not simply passive victims of economic forces but active agents who made their own culture, their own organisations, and their own traditions of resistance. This had profound implications not only for historiography but for politics and education.
The Making of the English Working Class (1963, Gollancz) is long but Thompson is a vivid and engaging writer, and individual chapters can be read independently.
Bryan Palmer's E.P.
Objections and Oppositions (1994, Verso) is the most accessible account of his life and work.
Customs in Common (1991, Merlin Press) collects his most important shorter pieces including the moral economy essay.
Whigs and Hunters (1975, Allen Lane) is Thompson's most focused single work, examining the Black Act of 1723 and the use of law to defend property rights against rural workers. For the time-discipline essay: it is collected in Customs in Common. For the broader context of social history: Harvey Kaye's The British Marxist Historians (1984, Polity Press) places Thompson alongside his colleagues Christopher Hill and Eric Hobsbawm.
History from below is politically motivated and therefore less objective.
Thompson acknowledged that all history involves choices about what to include and whose perspective to take seriously. His argument was that conventional history, focused on rulers and elites, was equally politically motivated: it reflected the perspectives and interests of the powerful. History from below is a corrective to an existing distortion, not a distortion of a previously neutral history. The question is not whether historians make choices but whether they are honest about the choices they make and whether the resulting history is supported by evidence.
Thompson argued that working-class people were always right and elites were always wrong.
Thompson was committed to understanding working-class people on their own terms and taking their moral arguments seriously, but this did not mean he thought they were always correct. He was a serious historian who followed the evidence. He acknowledged the limitations and failures of various working-class organisations and movements. His point was that their experiences and arguments deserved serious engagement, not that they should be romanticised or that their opponents' positions were without merit.
Thompson's work is only relevant to English or British history.
While Thompson's most famous work focused on the English working class, his methodological contributions, including history from below, the concept of the moral economy, and the analysis of class as a relationship rather than a thing, have been applied across many different national and historical contexts. Historians of Latin America, Africa, Asia, and the United States have all drawn on his methods and concepts. His argument about taking seriously the experiences of those who have been left out of the historical record is a universal methodological principle.
Thompson was simply a Marxist historian who applied Marxist theory to history.
Thompson was a socialist but his relationship to Marxism was critical and independent. His polemic against Louis Althusser's structural Marxism was one of the most sustained critiques of orthodox Marxism produced by any historian of the left. He argued that structural Marxism, with its reduction of human experience to the effects of economic forces, was a betrayal of Marx's own historical method. Thompson insisted on the importance of human agency, experience, and moral commitment in a way that differed significantly from the determinism of orthodox Marxist historiography.
The Poverty of Theory (1978, Merlin Press) is Thompson's most directly theoretical work and his polemic against Althusserian Marxism.
Harvey Kaye and Keith McClelland's edited collection E.P.
Critical Perspectives (1990, Polity Press) provides the best overview of his contributions and their debates.
Writing by Candlelight (1980, Merlin Press) and The Heavy Dancers (1985, Merlin Press) collect his political journalism and peace movement writing.
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