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Goliath's Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse

Goliath's Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse

by Luke Kemp

Knopf ·2025 ·592 pages
New Release
Near the Top
Near the Top
I Index
60/99
Maybe Someday

35/99

Critics' Rating Index

Maybe Someday

48/99

Readers' Rating Index

Top of the Pile

96/99

Scholars' Citation Index

51/99

Volume of Reviews

80/99

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About This Book

A vast and unprecedented survey of societal collapse—stretching from the Bronze Age to the age of silicon—that digs through the ruins of fallen societies to understand the root causes of their downfall and the most dire consequences for our future.Stepping back to look at our precariously interdependent global society of today—with the threat of nuclear war ever present and the world heating up faster than it did before the Great Permian Extinction, which wiped away 80–90 percent of life on Earth—one couldn't be blamed for Will we make it?Addressing this question with the seriousness it demands, Cambridge scholar Luke Kemp conducts a historical autopsy that stretches across five millennia, and more than 440 societal lifespans, from the first Egyptian dynasty to the modern-day United Kingdom, using the latest discoveries from archaeology and anthropology to reveal profound and often counterintuitive insights into why exactly societies fail.While books like Jared Diamond's Collapse zoom in on only a few case studies, Kemp's embrace of a "deep systems" approach, availing himself of the largest dataset possible, allows him to discover the broader trends, and deeper causes, of collapse that pose future risks—without abandoning the gripping historical narratives that bring these pages alive.Goliath's Curse is a stark reminder that there are both bright and dark sides to societal collapse—that it is not necessarily a reversion to chaos or a dark age—and that making a more resilient world may well mean making a more just one.


Reviews

"Brilliant and unnerving ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Despite its shortcomings, Goliath's Curse is best read as a call to channel apocalyptic angst into a productive political project, an appeal to combat oppression and inequality ..."

Linda Kinstler· The Atlantic Read review ↗ Near the Top

"An invigorating look at big-picture history across continents and millennia, and a survival manual to boot ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"But Goliath's Curse is still a strangely hopeful book."

Ed Simon· The New York Times Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

"But instead what the reader ultimately gets are the comforting 'progressive' orthodoxies of the 21st-century western academic world."

Mark Urban· The Times (UK) Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

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