Nonfiction occupied my
bedside table the past couple of weeks. Brief reviews
are below of four that are worth a read:
**** ****
The Fate of Rome: Climate, Disease, and
the End of an Empire by Kyle Harper
What is there to say about
the fate of Rome that hasn’t been said before? Didn’t Gibbon say it all more
than 200 years ago? He surely said a lot, but not quite all. (The six-volume Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire is
still a superb read though.) Gibbon and two centuries of historians after him
focused on internal social, political, and economic factors in combination with
a rising barbarian threat. Those were indeed crucial ingredients in the
slow-motion collapse, but in 1976 William H. McNeil in Plagues and Peoples argued that microbes gave a final push over the
edge. In the pre-vaccine/pre-antibiotic ancient world, diseases were
demographically devastating.
Kyle Harper reports on recent
DNA sequencing from Roman graves that confirms most of McNeil’s suspicions
about the identity of various ancient epidemics. The Antonine Plague was indeed
smallpox and it ravaged the Empire (Marcus Aurelius himself died of it) at a
time when the barbarians on the Rhine and Danube were on the offensive. Even
more devastating was the Plague of Justinian in the 6th century,
which has been identified as bubonic plague and which killed half the
population. Bubonic plague was particularly deadly because the primary vector
was not person to person but from flea-bearing rats to people. Rats were as
prevalent in the countryside where most of the population lived as in the
cities, so the plague was not, as most plagues were, mostly an urban event. (The
lethality was demonstrated again and for the same reason when it returned as
the Black Death 800 years later.) The demographic and economic destruction
wreaked by it put a permanent end to hopes of recovering the Western provinces.
As his own contribution to
the literature, Harper then tells us that one more pressure on the Empire has
been much overlooked: climate change. The Roman Empire’s great centuries (1st
century BCE through 2nd century CE) were during the Roman Climatic Optimum, an
unusually warm and wet period ideal for expansive agriculture. Climate then
swung erratically due to natural causes (volcanoes, solar variability, ocean
currents, etc.) before settling into the Antique Little Ice Age after 450 CE.
This curtailed agriculture and interacted unexpectedly with diseases: fleas
that died in hot summers, for example, survived when summers were cooler.
Harper explains the various methods including soil, plant, and ice samples by
which ancient climate can be reconstructed. Harper doesn’t make the mistake of
attributing Rome’s decline specifically to climate just because it is his own
special interest, but he tells us it was one more nail in the coffin.
**** ****
Ancient Rome on 5 Denarii a Day by Philip Matyszak
The Roman Empire ended as all
things do but it had a good run. What was it like actually to live there? Books
purporting to explain everyday life in ancient Rome have been around for
centuries, but they typically are such dry reading that it’s easy for one’s
eyes to glaze over. Matyszak gets around this with his travel guide aimed at a
21st century reader who presumably has access to a time machine. He
starts us off not in Rome but in Alexandria in order to experience the trip to
the city. We get all-important practical advice, such as to use traveler’s
checks instead of cash. Yes, really. Shipping companies doubled as banks: their
reps in Alexandria would give you scrip in exchange for your coins and this
could be exchanged for gold at the company’s office in Ostia (Rome’s port
city), thereby making you less of a target for thieves on the trip.
By internal evidence, the
guide puts us in the time of Severus when the city is at its height. Matyszak
tells us how to get a room in Rome, how to buy fast foods, where to find public
toilets, how to use the public baths, where the best brothels are, what
neighborhoods are dangerous after dark, and so on. And, of course, he tells
about the must-see sites, many of them still in existence today in various
degrees of repair, such as the baths, aqueducts, and temples. There are a lot
of them. We are told what is polite and what is rude in Roman society, how the
sexes interact, and how the classes interact. There also is the list of handy
phrases.
All-in-all it is a pleasant
romp and a painless way to get at least some inkling of what it was like to
visit the ancient city. If you do happen to be a time traveler, it will save
you many denarii, too.
**** ****
The Great Leveler by Walter Sheidel
Walter Sheidel, professor at
Stanford, studies economic inequality from Neolithic times to the present. His
book is neither a polemic against inequality nor a defense of it (though his
predisposition to “against” is evident), but rather a well-researched examination
of it over time. It is full of charts and Gini coefficients. In general, he
finds inequality tends to increase over time in any and all types of societies
with any and all types of governments provided economic trends are stable or
trending upward. This, he contends, has to do with the relative scarcity of
capital to labor and with the intertwinement of wealth and the governing
elites. The exceptions to the general rule – the times of great leveling –
involve “the four horsemen”: total war, Revolution, systems collapse, and
plague.
Smallish wars won’t do it.
Wars with full mobilization do, for they involve intense labor demand in the
military and in industry and intensive taxation to pay for it. Also mass
destruction of property in war naturally costs the people who own the property.
They have more to lose, so massive destruction has a leveling effect.
Revolution on a grand scale as in Russia and China in the last century certainly
lowered inequality but at a staggering human cost. Collapses, such as those of
the Roman Empire and the Tang Dynasty, wiped out the old aristocracies and thereby
increased equality until the new aristocracies built their wealth up. The economic
collapse of the Great Depression also was a leveler by destroying the asset
values of those who had assets. Plagues, which formerly carried off large
percentages of the population (upward of a third of population of Europe in the
Black Death) actually lead to increases in median living standards (rather than
just killing or bankrupting the rich with no benefit to anyone else) by spreading around
the assets of the deceased and increasing the demand for labor. The greatest
leveling in history took place in the time spanning the two world wars, the
Depression, the accompanying Revolutions, the creation of social welfare states
that the crises made possible, and the rebuilding after the wars. Yet, after
the rebuilding was done (the 1970s) inequality again ticked upward including in
social democracies.
Whether one views inequality
as a problem in itself or no problem at all if other incomes are rising or
stable, the book provides a treasure trove of data. Sheidel doesn’t anticipate
change anytime soon and worries what it might look like if it does arrive: “For
thousands of years, history has alternated between long stretches of rising or
high and stable inequality interspersed with violent compressions… All of us
who prize greater economic equality would do well to remember that with the
rarest of exceptions, it was only ever brought forth in sorrow. Be careful what
you wish for.”
**** ****
A Billion Wicked Thoughts by Ogi Ogas and Sai Gaddam
Anyone who ever has, say, looked
up “2018 Silverado” online only to find Chevy ads on the next five websites he
visits knows that Web searches are not secret. In general, only AIs designed
for commercial purposes bother to read them, but they are vast data sources for
anyone who wants to use them for other purposes.
Neuroscientists Ogas and
Gaddam analyzed 55 million sexually oriented search terms compiled by Dogpile,
broke them down into categories, and tried to see what these searches tell us
about human sexuality. The answers are creepy but intriguing. Some of them are
totally unsurprising, such as the conclusions that men overwhelmingly search
for visual porn while online romance novels, albeit raunchier than the
softcovers sold in stores are almost exclusively accessed by women (though
there are female targeted porn sites). The plots of those romances are most commonly
fiercely un-PC, and then there are the female-targeted EroRoms about romances
of gay men. Porn searches – whether straight or gay oriented – are often counterintuitive
to put it gently: Yes, teen cheerleaders are popular searches, but the fifth
most popular male search term is “grannies” and the third is “mom?” Beyond the
(almost mundane) BDSM searches there are amazingly specific fetishes: the authors
only slightly exaggerate when they remark, “Type in ‘Find people who have sex
with goats that are on fire’ and the computer will say ‘Specify the kind of
goat.’” The findings show a divergence in male and female interests greater
than whatever you think it is, and the nuances of straight and gay searches
offer material on which to ponder.
Though the reader may have
the urge to wash his or her hands after putting down the book, it offers a
perspective on and information about our fellow human beings (and perhaps
ourselves) that might never be shared in a public forum. Online, in presumed
privacy, we reveal our wicked ways and thoughts.
Dorothy – Wicked
Ones
With all that war, pestilence, climate change, etc. you probably need a happy pill. :) That book about getting by in Roman society for Denarii sounded interesting. The first book reminded me that I read or heard somewhere that the average age of a Roman back then was eighteen--not a very long lifespan. You can imagine what respect the graybeards got back then.
ReplyDeleteGetting to see the Roman baths in Bath, UK was fun. I could have spent an extra day there. I imagine that made a pleasant resort for those who could take advantage of it.
I also wondered how a disease like Aids could just more or less spring up like it did, but I guess it evolved. Although does make some of the conspiracy, government-made seem plausible.
I imagine that was fun to see and the Romans surely enjoyed their baths.
DeleteWe tend to forget what a toll disease used to take before the 20th century. Even the deadly strain of influenza that killed 50 million people at the end of WW1 a hundred years ago didn't cause an overall population decline, but in ancient and medieval times plagues could kill off 10, 20, 30 or even 50% of the population. Individual towns could be wiped out. An line graph for ancient population over time looks like a roller coaster. The baths probably helped spread a few.