The Organization of American Historians recently presented Jonathan
Levy’s Freaks of Fortune with book three
awards. If this is as good as it gets in American history, the field is in a
sad state. The book is not great history; it is not even good history.
The premise of the book is that the history of “risk” as we
know it dates to the nineteenth century. He explains that “at the end of the eighteenth
century “risk” still simply referred to a commodity bought and sold in an
insurance contract. Outside long distance maritime trade risk had very little
meaning or use.” And by the end of the
nineteenth century “risk was in fact everywhere. Before that century of capitalist
transformation, however, it was not.” Before this capitalist transformation risk
did not mean “extreme peril, hazard or danger.” But the capitalist system that “thrives
off radical uncertainty” brought “the insecurity of the sea to the land.” This
is all fascinating. Unfortunately, it is also nonsense. The first American
dictionary, Noah Webster’s 1806 Compendious
Dictionary of the English Language, was much less extensive than his later
works but still included the word risk:
Risk, n. hazard, chance, danger
Risk, v.t. to hazard, expose to chance, endanger
A quick search of American Periodical Series Online can
provide examples of the use of “risk” outside a maritime context:
In 1789 and essay in Columbian Magazine notes that allowing
hay to lie out for several days before it is collected”subjects it very much to
the danger of getting rain, and thus runs a great risk of being made good for
little.” (Columbian Magazine July
1789)
Or, “The inconveniences of ridges high and crooked are so
many, that one would be tempted to apply a remedy and any risk.” (Christian Scholar’s and Farmer’s Magazine
July 1789)
The whole book is based on a premise that is nonsense and
easily shown to be so. Moreover, accepting the premise requires one to ignore
considerable research about how people, especially farmers, dealt with risk before
the nineteenth century.
Levy goes onto talk about things like the Farmers’ Loan and Security Company, which did not
exist. He may at least have been close this time; there was a Farmer’s Loan and Trust Company. Perhaps this is nitpicking, but
how could someone study the history of capitalism and not know about the
Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, one of the named parties in Pollock v. Farmers’
Loan and Trust Company, the 1895 case that ruled an income tax
unconstitutional.
I can’t say that there were not parts of the book that I
found interesting and enjoyable, but, overall, I found it to be deeply flawed.
It came nowhere near the standards that historians should aspire to. The members
of the OAH should be the ones most concerned that American history be based on
thorough, careful and critical consideration of the sources; they should
be the ones shouting that the emperor has no clothes when it is not. Instead, they have granted the emperor
three awards for the best robes.
Correction August 31. 2019 Mike Konczal pointed out to me that Levy referred to the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company as the Farmers' Loan and Security Trust Company not the Farmers' Loan and Security Company.