All Thinkers

Eric Hobsbawm

Eric Hobsbawm was a British historian and one of the most influential historians of the 20th century. He wrote about the rise of capitalism, the development of the modern world, and the major political movements of the 19th and 20th centuries. He was a lifelong Marxist and Communist Party member. His writing was clear, ambitious, and read by both academics and general audiences. He was born in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1917. He died in London in 2012, aged 95. He came from a Jewish family. His father was British. His mother was Austrian. He was born in Alexandria where his father worked. The family moved to Vienna, then to Berlin. Both his parents died young. He was orphaned by 14. An aunt brought him to England in 1933, the year Hitler came to power in Germany. His timing was lucky. The move to England saved his life. Most of his Central European Jewish family who stayed behind were eventually killed in the Holocaust. He studied history at Cambridge from 1936. He joined the Communist Party as a young man and remained a member for the rest of his life, despite the party's decline and the revelations of Stalin's crimes. He served in the British army during the Second World War. After the war, he became a lecturer at Birkbeck College, University of London, where he taught for over 50 years. He wrote many books. His most famous are the four-volume series on the modern world: The Age of Revolution (1962), The Age of Capital (1975), The Age of Empire (1987), and The Age of Extremes (1994). Together these books cover European and world history from 1789 to 1991. He also wrote on bandits, on jazz, on nationalism, and on many other subjects. His autobiography Interesting Times came out in 2002. He continued writing into his nineties.

Origin
Egypt / Austria / United Kingdom
Lifespan
1917 - 2012
Era
Modern / 20th-21st Century
Subjects
History Marxism 20th Century European History Modern World History
Why They Matter

Eric Hobsbawm matters for three reasons. First, his four-volume history of the modern world reshaped how 19th and 20th-century European history was understood. The Age of Revolution argued that two revolutions, the French Revolution and the British Industrial Revolution, together created the modern world. The Age of Capital traced how capitalism reshaped the world after 1848. The Age of Empire described the European imperial expansion of the late 19th century. The Age of Extremes covered the violent 20th century from 1914 to 1991. The books combined detailed historical research with bold synthesis. They have been translated into many languages and are still widely read.

Second, he wrote in a way that made serious history accessible to general readers without losing rigour. Most academic history is written for specialists. Hobsbawm wrote for educated general audiences. His prose is clear. His arguments are bold. His judgements are firm even when they could have been hedged. The combination has been rare in 20th-century academic history. He helped show that scholarly work could reach wide audiences. Many later historians who write for general readers have followed his example.

Third, his Marxist framework offered a particular way of understanding history that has shaped historical thinking even among non-Marxists. He emphasised economic forces, class conflict, and material conditions. He took seriously the perspectives of working people, peasants, and the poor, who often appear only as background in conventional histories. Even historians who reject his political conclusions have absorbed his insistence that economic and class history matters. His influence runs through much of contemporary social and economic history.

Key Ideas
1
The Age of Revolution
2
The Short Twentieth Century
3
Why He Stayed a Communist
Key Quotations
"The dustbin of history is humanity's largest receptacle."
— Eric Hobsbawm, in interviews and writings
Hobsbawm sometimes used this phrase to capture how much of human history gets forgotten. Most lives are not recorded. Most actions leave no trace. Most ideas die with the people who held them. The 'dustbin of history' is the metaphorical container for all this lost material. The phrase is sad but realistic. It also makes a serious point. The history we have is partial. The records that survived are biased towards the powerful, the literate, and the lucky. Most of human experience has been lost. Honest history acknowledges this. It tries to recover what it can while admitting how much cannot be recovered. For students, the line is a useful starting point for thinking about historical sources. Whatever we know about the past, we know only a small part of what actually happened. The unknown is much larger than the known. Hobsbawm's whole career was an attempt to recover small pieces of what would otherwise have been lost.
"The world that went to pieces at the end of the 1980s was the world shaped by the impact of the Russian Revolution of 1917."
— Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Extremes (1994)
Hobsbawm makes a striking claim in The Age of Extremes. The world we lived in for most of the 20th century, he argues, was shaped by the Russian Revolution. Not just communist countries. Capitalist countries too. The threat of communism pushed Western governments to provide welfare states. Anti-communism shaped American foreign policy and culture. The Cold War organised global politics. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the entire framework that had shaped the century ended. The view is bold. It treats one event in 1917 as foundational for over 70 years of world history. Other historians have given different framings. Some emphasise the world wars more. Some emphasise capitalism's own internal dynamics. Hobsbawm's framing is one major interpretation among several. For students, the claim is useful for thinking about how historians shape historical periods. Different starting points and different framings produce different histories. Knowing several framings helps make sense of how history actually gets written.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing students to modern history
How to introduce
Tell students that Eric Hobsbawm wrote one of the most influential histories of the modern world. His four-volume series covers European and world history from 1789 to 1991. Discuss with students how this period shaped the world they live in. Industrial production. Modern democracy. Two world wars. Empire and decolonisation. Capitalism. Communism. Hobsbawm's books are useful entry points to all of this. They are dense but readable. They are still widely used as textbooks at universities. Many educated readers in many countries have learned modern history partly through Hobsbawm. His work is not the only way of telling these stories. It is one of the major ways.
Critical Thinking When teaching students about how traditions can be invented
How to introduce
Tell students about Hobsbawm's concept of invented traditions. Many things presented as ancient are actually quite recent. Scottish kilts and tartans as we now know them are largely 19th-century inventions. Many royal ceremonies are newer than they look. National anthems and flags are often less than 200 years old. Discuss with students examples of 'traditions' they know about. How old are they really? The discussion is useful for thinking about how cultural identity gets constructed. Real continuities exist. So do invented ones. Distinguishing between them is part of careful cultural and historical thinking. Hobsbawm and his colleagues did major work on this question. The framework remains useful for analysing claims about heritage and tradition today.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When teaching students about ordinary people in history
How to introduce
Tell students that traditional history often focused on kings, generals, and statesmen. Hobsbawm and other 20th-century historians worked to recover histories of ordinary people: peasants, workers, soldiers, bandits, women, colonised peoples. The approach is sometimes called 'history from below'. Discuss with students why this matters. Most people who ever lived were not kings. Most were ordinary people. Their lives shaped history just as much as the lives of the powerful, even if they left fewer records. Hobsbawm's book Bandits is one example. He took social bandits seriously as historical figures rather than dismissing them as criminals. The approach has shaped modern history. Students learning about any historical period should ask: who is missing from the standard story?
Further Reading

For a first introduction, the four-volume modern world series is the major work: The Age of Revolution (1962), The Age of Capital (1975), The Age of Empire (1987), and The Age of Extremes (1994). All are widely available in paperback. Hobsbawm's autobiography Interesting Times (2002) is accessible and gives a sense of his life and political commitments in his own words. Tony Judt's Postwar (2005) is a useful complementary history of postwar Europe by a non-Marxist historian.

Key Ideas
1
History From Below
2
The Invented Tradition
3
Why He Wrote So Clearly
Key Quotations
"It is the historian's business to remember what others forget."
— Paraphrased from Eric Hobsbawm's writings on the historian's role
Hobsbawm often wrote about what historians are for. The most basic job, he argued, is remembering. Most of what happens gets forgotten. Most lives are not recorded. Most ordinary people leave no trace. The historian's job is to recover what would otherwise be lost. This is especially important for the histories of those who did not write themselves into the record: peasants, workers, women, colonised peoples, slaves. The traditional history of kings and generals had been told and retold. The histories of ordinary people had often not been told at all. Hobsbawm and many other 20th-century historians worked to recover them. The work is humble in some ways. The historian is not creating new things. They are preserving and presenting what already happened. The work is also serious. Without it, much of human experience would be lost. For intermediate students, the line is a useful prompt for thinking about why history matters. The past is not just academic. It is the record of human experience. Forgetting it leaves us with a thinner, less honest understanding of what people have lived through.
"All invented traditions, so far as possible, use history as a legitimator of action and cement of group cohesion."
— Eric Hobsbawm, The Invention of Tradition (1983)
Hobsbawm makes the point that invented traditions almost always claim to be ancient. Why? Because age confers authority. A practice that is genuinely ancient can claim that we should keep doing it. A practice that was invented last decade has less authority. So the inventors of new traditions often present them as old. Scottish tartan rules. Welsh Eisteddfod ceremonies. British royal rituals. Many were created in the 19th or 20th century. Their inventors presented them as ancient practices being recovered. The deception was usually unconscious. People genuinely believed they were preserving heritage. The actual history shows the practices were new. The pattern matters because nationalism and political movements depend on it. New nations need to feel old. New ideologies need to feel timeless. Inventing traditions that claim ancient roots is one common way of creating this feeling. For intermediate students, the framework is useful. The next time you encounter a 'traditional' practice or symbol, ask how old it actually is. The answer may surprise you.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When teaching students about how historians frame periods
How to introduce
Discuss with students Hobsbawm's idea of the 'short twentieth century' from 1914 to 1991. Ages of history are not natural divisions. Historians choose them. Different choices produce different histories. Hobsbawm's choice highlights certain themes: the world wars as starting point, the Cold War as organising structure, the Soviet collapse as ending. Other historians have made different choices. Some date the modern century differently. Some emphasise different events as turning points. Discuss with students how the choice of framing shapes what gets emphasised. There is no single right answer. There are better and worse framings depending on what you are trying to understand. Hobsbawm's framing has been widely adopted because it captures something true about the period. It is not the only framing possible.
Creative Expression When teaching students about clear writing on complex subjects
How to introduce
Tell students that Hobsbawm wrote serious history in unusually clear prose. Most academic writing is technical and aimed at specialists. He wrote for educated general readers without losing rigour. Read with students a passage from one of his books. Discuss what makes it work. Plain sentences. Vivid examples. Strong opinions clearly expressed. Complex arguments built up step by step. The clarity took work. Writing clearly about complex things is harder than writing in jargon. Hobsbawm revised carefully. He read his sentences aloud. The result is prose that has reached millions of readers. Students writing about complex subjects can learn from his approach. Plain writing is not simple writing. It is writing that has been worked over until the complexity is carried clearly.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, Bandits (1969, revised 2000) is a fascinating shorter book. The Invention of Tradition (1983), edited with Terence Ranger, contains Hobsbawm's essays on the topic. Industry and Empire (1968) covers British economic history. The Age of Capital remains particularly useful as a synthesis of mid-19th-century history. Geoffrey Eley's Forging Democracy (2002) gives related territory from a similar perspective.

Key Ideas
1
His Defence of Stalinism
2
Marxism as Historical Method
3
Why His Work Has Lasted
Key Quotations
"I am of an age that may regret being too late to die in the war."
— Eric Hobsbawm, Interesting Times (2002)
Hobsbawm wrote something close to this in his autobiography. He had been a young Jewish refugee from Nazi Europe in the 1930s. Most of his Central European Jewish family had been killed in the Holocaust. He survived because his family had moved to England in time. The line captures complicated feelings. There is survivor's guilt. There is awareness that his political commitments grew partly from this terrible context. There is some honesty about the strangeness of having been spared. He had been shaped by the politics of the 1930s, when communism seemed to many young Jewish refugees the only serious opposition to fascism. The Cold War later complicated this picture. Many young 1930s communists left the party after Stalin's crimes became clear. Hobsbawm did not. The reasons partly trace back to the formative experience of 1930s Europe. For advanced students, the line is useful for thinking about how personal experience shapes political and intellectual commitments. Hobsbawm's politics cannot be understood apart from his refugee youth. The understanding does not excuse his later judgements. It does help explain how a serious historian could remain in a party whose history included terrible crimes.
"The 20th century was the most extraordinary century in the history of humanity."
— Eric Hobsbawm, Age of Extremes (1994)
Hobsbawm opens The Age of Extremes with claims about the unique character of the 20th century. More humans died from violence than in any previous century. Population grew faster than ever. Technology transformed everyday life beyond recognition. Two world wars devastated Europe. Empires collapsed. Communism rose and fell. Capitalism transformed the world. Climate change began to threaten the future. The combination has no historical precedent. The 20th century was, by any measure, extraordinary. Hobsbawm's framing is bold. Some historians push back. They argue that earlier centuries were also extraordinary in their own ways. They argue that ranking centuries by their importance is not really historical work. The framing is also useful. It captures the sense of disruption and transformation many people who lived through the 20th century felt. The world changed beyond recognition. For advanced students, the claim is a useful prompt. Were earlier centuries less extraordinary, or do we just know less about them? The discussion has no simple answer. It is worth taking seriously.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When teaching students about thinkers with troubling political loyalties
How to introduce
Discuss with advanced students Hobsbawm's lifelong membership of the Communist Party. He stayed in the party through revelations of Stalin's crimes, the Soviet invasion of Hungary, and many other events that caused other intellectuals to leave. He acknowledged Soviet crimes. He still found leaving impossible. His 1994 comment about Stalin's deaths being justified if the Soviet experiment had succeeded was widely condemned. Discuss with students how to read writers whose political loyalties seem indefensible. We do not have to choose between worship and total rejection. We can read carefully, take what is valuable, and notice what is harmful. Hobsbawm's historical work has lasting value. His specific political judgements about the Soviet Union were badly wrong. Both observations are true. Honest engagement holds them together.
Critical Thinking When teaching students about Marxism as a method of analysis
How to introduce
Discuss with advanced students how Hobsbawm used Marxism as a method of historical analysis without focusing on revolutionary politics. He thought class conflict mattered for understanding history. He thought economic conditions shaped politics, ideas, and culture. He thought capitalism produced characteristic patterns of inequality and crisis. These claims are Marxist in inspiration. They are also widely accepted in modified forms by many non-Marxist historians. The Marxist toolkit for analysing history can be used by people who reject Marxist political conclusions. Discuss with students how this works. Methods can travel between different political frameworks. Concepts can be useful for analysis even when the wider political framework that produced them is rejected. Hobsbawm's case is one of many examples of this pattern.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

His work is only useful for Marxists.

What to teach instead

It is widely read by non-Marxists. His books have been standard texts in many universities, including ones whose politics are quite different from his own. His emphasis on economic forces, class conflict, and the perspectives of ordinary people has been absorbed by many historians who reject Marxist politics. Even strong critics of communism have found his historical work valuable. The Marxist framework gives him certain analytical tools. The tools work for many readers regardless of their wider political views. Treating his work as only for Marxists narrows its actual readership and influence enormously. His four-volume modern world series has been read by millions of people across the political spectrum.

Common misconception

His Communist Party membership made him a Soviet apologist.

What to teach instead

He was more critical of the Soviet Union than this picture suggests. He acknowledged Stalin's crimes openly in his writings. He criticised many specific Soviet policies and decisions. His later books are particularly clear about how badly the Soviet experiment failed. What he did was refuse to leave the party despite these failures. His reasons were partly biographical: the party had shaped his identity as a young Jewish refugee in 1930s Europe. His reasons were partly principled: he thought capitalism had its own grave problems that required some kind of left opposition. The 1994 comment about Stalin's deaths was a serious misjudgement. It was not his typical position. The picture of him as a simple Soviet apologist mischaracterises a more complicated commitment.

Common misconception

He wrote mainly about the 20th century.

What to teach instead

His major work covers the long 19th century, from 1789 to 1914, in three volumes (Age of Revolution, Age of Capital, Age of Empire). His 20th-century book Age of Extremes is one volume of the four. He also wrote extensively on earlier periods, including bandits, peasant rebels, and labour movements going back to the 17th century. His range was unusually wide. Most historians specialise in narrow periods. Hobsbawm covered over 200 years of European and world history in his major series, plus other periods in his other books. The picture of him as primarily a 20th-century historian misses most of his work. He was a historian of the modern world from the late 18th century onwards.

Common misconception

Academic historians today have moved past his framework.

What to teach instead

Many have built on it rather than rejected it. His attention to economic conditions, class conflict, and ordinary people's experience has shaped modern social and economic history. His concept of invented tradition is now standard in studies of nationalism and identity. His four-volume modern world series remains widely used as university textbooks. Some of his specific political conclusions have been criticised. Some of his Marxist framework has been challenged by alternative approaches. But the basic methods he helped establish have not been abandoned. They have been developed in new directions. Recent historians of capitalism, slavery, and global economic history continue to work in territory Hobsbawm helped open. The picture of historians having simply moved past him is not accurate.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Karl Marx
Hobsbawm worked within the Marxist tradition that started with Marx's writings in the 19th century. He used Marxist concepts (class, mode of production, ideology) as tools for historical analysis. He did not slavishly follow Marx. He developed Marxist analysis in his own ways, especially through his work on bandits, invented tradition, and the long 19th century. Reading them together gives students a sense of how a major intellectual tradition develops over generations. Marx set foundations. Hobsbawm and many other 20th-century Marxist historians built on those foundations in directions Marx could not have anticipated.
Complements
E.P. Thompson
Thompson, the British historian who wrote The Making of the English Working Class (1963), worked in close parallel with Hobsbawm. Both were British Marxist historians who helped found history from below. Both wrote major works that shaped 20th-century historiography. They knew each other and read each other's work. Thompson left the Communist Party in 1956 after the Soviet invasion of Hungary. Hobsbawm stayed. The political difference shaped their later relationship. Their historical methods remained close. Reading them together gives students a sense of how the British Marxist historical school developed in the second half of the 20th century. Hobsbawm and Thompson are its two most important figures.
Complements
Antonio Gramsci
Gramsci, the Italian Marxist theorist who died in 1937, developed concepts including hegemony and the war of position that Hobsbawm and many later Marxist historians used. Gramsci's work was largely written in fascist prison and was not widely available in English until the 1970s. Once available, it shaped how Western Marxists thought about culture, ideology, and politics. Hobsbawm engaged with Gramsci's work throughout his career. Reading them together gives students a sense of how 20th-century Marxist thought developed across European countries. Gramsci provided concepts. Hobsbawm and others applied them to specific historical situations.
In Dialogue With
Howard Zinn
Zinn, the American historian who wrote A People's History of the United States (1980), worked in a tradition close to Hobsbawm's. Both wrote 'history from below'. Both wrote for general audiences. Both took left-wing political positions. Both insisted on recovering the histories of ordinary people, marginalised groups, and resistance movements. Their specific contexts differed. Hobsbawm focused on Europe and the world. Zinn focused on the United States. Reading them together gives students a sense of how a tradition of progressive popular history has developed across countries. The traditions overlap and inform each other.
Complements
Walter Rodney
Rodney, the Guyanese historian and revolutionary who wrote How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (1972), worked in a Marxist historical tradition that overlapped with Hobsbawm's. Both used Marxist analysis to understand modern history. Rodney focused on the colonial impact on Africa. Hobsbawm focused on European and world history. Both produced works that have shaped how their fields think. Rodney was assassinated in 1980 at age 38. Hobsbawm lived to 95. The parallel and difference is instructive. Reading them together gives students a sense of how Marxist historical methods have been used by scholars from many different national and racial backgrounds.
Anticipates
Thomas Piketty
Piketty, the contemporary French economist, has done major work on inequality across the long term. His historical approach to economics has parallels with Hobsbawm's economic approach to history. Both insist on long historical perspective for understanding contemporary economic patterns. Both have reached general audiences with serious scholarly work. Both have engaged with Marxist analytical traditions while not being orthodox Marxists. Reading them together gives students a sense of how careful long-term economic and historical analysis can illuminate contemporary problems. Hobsbawm wrote history with attention to economics. Piketty writes economics with attention to history. The combination has shaped public understanding.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, the journal Past and Present, which Hobsbawm helped found in 1952, continues to publish important historical scholarship in the tradition he helped establish. Recent work by Geoffrey Eley, William Sewell Jr., Donald Sassoon, and others continues to develop related approaches. The British Marxist Historians by Harvey J. Kaye (1984) places Hobsbawm in his intellectual community. Critical assessments of his work, including by Robert Conquest and others on his Soviet politics, are also worth engaging.