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Naoíse Mac Sweeney. 2023. The West: A New History of an Old Idea (London: W.H. Allen [Penguin Random House], 2013, 437 pp., 14 illustr., hbk ISBN 978-0-7535-5892-8)

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Naoíse Mac Sweeney. 2023. The West: A New History of an Old Idea (London: W.H. Allen [Penguin Random House], 2013, 437 pp., 14 illustr., hbk ISBN 978-0-7535-5892-8)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2023

Lucia Nixon*
Affiliation:
Wolfson College, University of Oxford, UK [email protected]
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Association of Archaeologists

The West is a grand book: grand in its timespan of nearly three millennia; in its near-global geographical spread; and, above all, in its subject: a new history of an old idea. Naoíse Mac Sweeney writes with clarity and verve; and it's always refreshing to read something about the ancient and modern world which is anything but pale, male, and stale.

Mac Sweeney's main argument in her introductory chapter ‘The Importance of Origins’ (pp. 5–6), has two parts: first, that ‘the grand narrative of Western Civilization is fundamentally wrong’; and second, that ‘the invention, popularization and longevity of the grand narrative of Western Civilization all stem from its ideological utility’. In other words, the grand narrative of Western Civilization is useful as part of what I call a chronology of desire—use of the past in the present, to justify the future that people want (Nixon, Reference Nixon2004: 239)—in this case ‘Western expansion and imperialism, as well as ongoing systems of White racial dominance’ (p. 6).

The body of the book consists of fourteen intellectual and historical biographies (six women, eight men), similar to the approach successfully taken by Herrin (Reference Herrin2020) in her book on Ravenna. These are ‘all people in whose lives and work we can see something of the zeitgeist; through whose experiences, actions and writings we can discern changing ideas about civilizational inheritance and imagined cultural genealogies’ (p. 11). The biographies, starting with Herodotus and ending with Carrie Lam, cover six periods, the ‘classical world’, the so-called Dark Ages, the Renaissance, the seventeenth/eighteenth centuries ad, the mature form of Western Civilization in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the changing reality of our own twentieth and earlier twenty-first century world. The biographies also highlight the ‘dazzling diversity’ (p. 7) of the ancient and modern world—not just women and men, but different races and ethnicities.

The biographies of Livilla (Ch. 2) and Godfrey of Viterbo (Ch. 4) explain why Romans, and later Germans, wanted to be associated with the losing side of the Trojan War (which I personally had never understood before; see especially pp. 95–6). Chapter 4 also illustrates how the concept of ‘Europa’ changed more than once, and how the combination of Greek and Roman antiquity, which we often take for granted, was a much later development than we might think.

Chapter 3, on Al-Kindi of Baghdad, perfectly represents the malleability of late antiquity, when at least some people were open to all knowledge and wisdom, not just their own. Similarly, Chapter 7, on the astonishing correspondence between Safiye Sultana and Elizabeth I, reveals contact between the Ottoman and Elizabethan realms at the highest level—and, I would add, only twenty years after one of the greatest cross-cultural transfers ever, Sinan's Süleimaniye mosque in Istanbul, inspired by Agia Sophia built a millennium earlier. In Phillis Wheatley's lifetime (Ch. 11), Greco-Roman antiquity was first labelled ‘classical’ (p. 264), and ‘Western Civilization became racialized’, and therefore superior and significant (pp. 206–7). Edward Said's work (Ch. 13) showed that Western Civilization is ‘an invented social construct, one that is extremely powerful and has far-reaching consequences in the real world, but a construct nonetheless’ (p. 306).

The concluding chapter, ‘The Shape of History’, calls for a new grand narrative of Western history—one that actually takes the facts into account, and applauds the work of people studying Greco-Roman antiquity to make it richer and more diverse as well as more accurate.

I have four comments about this book. First, Mac Sweeney doesn't engage with the term ‘civilization’, western or otherwise. Kenneth Clark (Reference Clark1969: 1) famously said that he couldn't define civilization, but he was sure that he knew it when he saw it. It was clear that civilization for him was implicitly Western and European (Ottoman Turkish and Chinese civilizations get only a brief mention, p. 197).

Kenneth Clark is not the only person to recognize civilization when he sees it. Mac Sweeney's Chapter 14 on Carrie Lam discusses the Ancient Civilizations Forum, launched by China and Greece, plus Bolivia, China, Egypt, Greece, India, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Mexico, and Peru—conspicuously omitting most of northwestern Europe and north America, Asia apart from China, and Africa south of Egypt. These countries are considered ‘cradles of ancient civilization’; the aims of the Forum are ‘to transform culture into a source of soft power’ and ‘to highlight… international cultural cooperation as a factor for economic development’. These nine countries also ‘represent more than 40 percent of the world population and are at the centre of international political developments in the Americas, Europe, Asia and Africa’ (Ancient Civilizations Forum n.d.).

Civilization, it seems, depends on the eye of the beholder: what isn't civilization is by implication uncivilized. The inclusion of Egypt and India in the Ancient Civilizations Forum is interesting. In the final periods of Western Civilization, as discussed in this book (later nineteenth to twenty-first century), the modern peoples of Egypt and India were clearly not civilized enough, or not civilized in the right way—even though their complex societies included literate urbanites (Abd al Gawad & Stevenson, Reference Abd el Gawad and Stevenson2021 on Egypt).

Mac Sweeney points out that the idea of classical Athens held up as a ‘beacon of democracy’ (p. 7) is false—but that that didn't stop Western Civilization from so enshrining it. What she doesn't discuss is the reasons for the veneration of the Iliad as a foundation text of Western Civilization, which would be worth exploring. Homer does say that the poem is about the anger of Achilles, but what this means is not, say, a righteous rage for social justice, but the world-class sulking of an over-entitled man in connection with the division of booty, specifically female prisoners—is this ‘civilized’ by any definition of the word? And is dragging the corpse of your defeated opponent Hector around your friend Patroclus’ grave ‘civilized’? Is it ‘civilized’ for Agamemnon to sacrifice his daughter to make the winds blow in the right direction?

The word civilization matters—it's a hugely loaded term because of Tylor and Morgan's terrible nineteenth-century taxonomy (civilization, barbarism, savagery; Morgan, Reference Morgan1877). So, does ‘civilization’ in this book mean what it used to mean, i.e. literate, urban cultures? Or does the author think that civilization has some other meaning (e.g. treating people fairly)?

Second, the author establishes clearly that racism clouded the definition of Western civilization (Ch. 11, as already noted). The false binary of whiteness and blackness was inaccurate for antiquity; there is plenty of evidence for mixed populations. In addition, ancient sculpture was almost always polychrome, rather than pure white (Bond, Reference Bond2017). But in the mindset of Western Civilization, whiteness was equated with purity, and blackness with the mongrelization of impurity and possible ‘barbarism’—the ‘uncivilized’ category mentioned above. When Mary Beard used credible evidence to suggest, correctly, that the population of Roman Britain included several races rather than one white one, there was immediate pushback (Higgins, Reference Higgins2017). It will not be easy to persuade everyone that the evidence we have for racial mixing in Greco-Roman antiquity is factually true. What Mac Sweeney does not discuss in any detail is ethnicity, another important category for the past and the present; see Rebecca Futo Kennedy's videos on YouTube (Reference Kennedy2020).

In addition, ‘whiteness’ or ‘blackness’ of people are not fixed categories but rather ones that change from period to period. Well into the twentieth century, the perceived dilution of purity meant that modern Greeks were not quite white enough, and thus, considered the unworthy successors to the grand Greeks of the fifth century bc (Nixon, Reference Nixon2020). By the same token modern Italians have sometimes been considered neither deserving of their glorious past, nor properly white, especially as immigrants to North America.

Third, it is surprising that material culture forms so little of Mac Sweeney's exposition in The West that there are no pictures of any of it in this book (cf. Herrin, Reference Herrin2020's splendid colour plates). The importance of Graeco-Roman material culture for the idea and indeed appearance of Western Civilization can be seen in several ways. One is the eighteenth and nineteenth century Greek revival, in the UK and the USA in particular. In addition to Inigo Jones's banqueting-hall in Whitehall and Palladio's neoclassical houses (pp. 195–6), think of Buckingham Palace, The White House, Congress, banks, museums, universities, and even observatories (often copies of the Tower of the Winds in Athens); and think of ideology made classically monumental in Italian Fascist architecture and Nazi notions of racial purity.

The entitlement of northwestern European collecting (shades of Achilles and the division of spoils in the Iliad) is another aspect of material culture. Mac Sweeney mentions the Earl of Arundel's statue gallery (p. 195); but, on an even grander and more public scale, remember the bronze horses at St Mark's in Venice, the Pergamon Altar in Berlin, the Winged Victory of Samothrace and Venus de Milo in Paris, and, above all, the Parthenon marbles in London. It was clearly important for people in north-western Europe to ‘acquire’ and incorporate pieces of the classical past into their then present—behaviour which is part of the phenomenon of chronologies of desire, whereby people choose the past, physical as well as metaphorical, that best fits their present and hoped-for future (Nixon, Reference Nixon2004: 435–39).

And there is no mention of the excitement of archaeological excavations, not even Schliemann's nineteenth-century projects at Troy and at Mycenae, where he famously exclaimed ‘I have gazed upon the face of Agamemnon’, upon discovering the sixteenth century bc gold mask from Shaft Grave V in Grave Circle A, in this case extending the history and archaeology of Greece even farther back in time to the (mythical) time of Homer, more than a millennium before Herodotus. Mac Sweeney's chapter on Gladstone strangely omits his interest in Schliemann's work: among other things, Gladstone (Reference Gladstone and Schliemann1880) wrote a substantial preface to Schliemann's book on Mycenae, and this information would have added significantly to Chapter 12.

Fourth, there are no maps in this book (again cf. Herrin, Reference Herrin2020, which has maps as well as colour plates); although the UK edition does have a very strange map on the cover, featuring a north-south tear through the east coast of the Americas and Europe. But ideally there would have been several maps, because, as Mac Sweeney's discussion shows so dramatically, neither the West nor the implied East are monolithic concepts nor unchanging geographical realities—it is more a question of Wests, just as it is also a question of Easts; and maps can show these changes quickly and easily—for example, the contrast between the Roman Empire and the territories of the later ones (Byzantine, Holy Roman, Ottoman), and the accompanying changes in those Wests and Easts.

In our own time, there are two other important geopolitical compass directions, separating the Global North and South, based on ‘the concept of a gap between the Global North and the Global South in terms of development and wealth’ (Royal Geographic Society n.d.). The Global North includes the USA, Canada, Europe, Israel, Japan South Korea, Australia, New Zealand; and the Global South encompasses countries in the regions of Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia without Israel, Japan and South Korea, Oceania without Australia and New Zealand. Indigenous peoples are included in both groups, as are people of different races. The boundary between the Global North and South partly coincides with ideas of the West and East, but mostly it does not. If we return to the Ancient Civilizations Forum, we can see immediately that it is a combination of two Global North countries (Greece, Italy) and eight Global South countries (Bolivia, China, Egypt, India, Iran, Iraq, Mexico, Peru). Which of these two sets of compass points, West and East, or North and South, will be important in the future? Who will be constructing their respective grand narratives, and what will those grand narratives be based on?

To sum up: as Mac Sweeney shows, we have our work cut out for us—the construction of more accurate, and more useful, grand narratives, Western or otherwise.

References

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