[sounds like an old rock group, no?]

Posted: 07_25_2005
Review of Guns Germs and Steel

Is This How the West Won?
Michael Balter*
from July 8 issue of Science

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guns, Germs, and Steel
Lions Television, London, for National Geographic Television and
Films, Washington, DC. Three one-hour episodes. On PBS, Monday
evenings, 11 to 25 July 2005.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jared Diamond is a biologist at the University of California, Los
Angeles; a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences; and the
author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book Guns, Germs, and Steel (1).
Now he is also the star of a three-part series, based on the book,
that airs this month on the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in the
United States. The series details Diamond's influential yet
controversial explanation for why the world is divided into haves and
have-nots--the principal reason, he maintains, is geography: At the
end of the last Ice Age, about 11,500 years ago, prehistoric
hunter-gatherers living amongst the wild ancestors of today's
domesticated plants and animals--most notably the wheat, barley,
sheep, goats, and cattle native to the Near East--were ideally
situated to invent farming and amass the agricultural surpluses that
fueled the rise of civilization and technology. Meanwhile, the
unfortunate inhabitants of geographic regions with few domesticable
species--such as Africa and the New World--lagged behind in their
development; even worse, they eventually fell victim to armies of
(mostly European) colonizers whose technologically superior weaponry
allowed them to subjugate entire continents. Adding to this onslaught
of guns and steel, Diamond argues, were the ravages of deadly diseases
that the invaders brought with them, such as smallpox, to which
Europeans had developed some immunity (often through their long
coexistence with domesticated animals) but which felled native peoples
by the millions.

Diamond's thesis is one of the most widely discussed big ideas of
recent years, and deservedly so. For one thing, it is an explicitly
anti-racist explanation for social and economic inequalities on a
global level, an explanation that dispenses with subtle and
not-so-subtle assumptions about the inherent superiority of Europeans
and their descendants. The have-nots, Diamond counters, are simply
those whose prehistoric ancestors were dealt an unlucky draw of the
geographical cards. The book, a best-seller in both the original and
paperback editions, is required reading in many university courses. It
has stimulated considerable debate; for that reason alone a film
version, which will undoubtedly reach an even wider audience than the
book, seems justified. And it would be churlish to deny Diamond the
star treatment he receives in the film, even if one repeated scene of
the biologist cruising down a river in Papua New Guinea--while the
narrator, actor Peter Coyote, tells us dramatically that Diamond is
"on a quest" to understand the roots of power--seems just a bit too
focused on the person rather than the ideas.

More worrying, however, is the fact that during all of Diamond's
journeys--which take him across the globe by boat, train, airplane,
and helicopter, with film crew in tow--the viewer is told only once
(at the end of the first hour) that there are scholars who disagree
with his thesis. Nor are any of these dissenters ever interviewed,
even though a number of other experts and personalities appear in the
film to bolster Diamond's viewpoint. This imbalance is a disservice to
television viewers, who are surely sophisticated enough to hear
challenges to Diamond's ideas without losing track of the plot line.
The omission might not be so serious if Diamond had only recently
presented his thesis, but over the eight years since the book was
first published its tenets have been much debated. Indeed, it is
usually assigned to university students precisely so that they can
discuss the merits of Diamond's arguments. In 2001, for example,
Cornell University in New York required all of that year's incoming
undergraduates to read Guns, Germs, and Steel as part of a new student
reading project (2). Members of Cornell's anthropology department
organized a campus-wide debate about the book and raised a number of
important questions--including whether the geographic vagaries of
11,000 years ago are sufficient to explain why hundreds of millions of
human beings live in dire poverty today.

The film opens with Diamond in Papua New Guinea, where he has
conducted research for many decades and become an expert on the
island's birds. The viewer is told that Diamond's quest began more
than 30 years ago, when a man named Yali, whom the biologist "met on a
beach," asks him, "Why you white man have so much cargo and we New
Guineans have so little?" In the book, Diamond explains that Yali was
a "remarkable local politician," but in the film we are told nothing
about Yali or who he was. Instead, an actor playing Yali looms before
the camera intoning what Diamond calls "Yali's question," which
Diamond will spend the ensuing years trying to answer. Here, the film
makes its first misstep: In fact, Yali was the charismatic leader of
an indigenous post-World War II movement in New Guinea, sometimes
called the cargo cult, that sought to acquire more European goods
[readers wanting to know more can consult anthropologist Peter
Lawrence's Road Belong Cargo (3)]. By portraying Yali as an anonymous
native on the beach, rather than the sophisticated leader he was, the
filmmakers inadvertently exaggerate the (albeit important) cultural
differences between New Guinea and Western societies.

Fortunately, this scene is followed by some of the film's strongest
sequences, in which Diamond and the narrator (aided by interviews with
several respected experts on the "Neolithic Revolution") explain the
origins of agriculture in the Near East. The viewer gets to visit two
important Neolithic excavations in progress, including 11,500-year-old
Dhra' in the Jordan Valley, one of the earliest farming villages ever
discovered. Meanwhile, Diamond points out, to convincing effect, that
out of 14 large mammals domesticated by humans over the millennia
since Dhra' was founded, none come from Africa or North America, and
only one (the llama) comes from South America. Moreover, Diamond
argues, farming was able to spread both east and west from its origins
in the Near East (and eventually to North America) because points on
the globe that share the same latitude share the same day length and
often a similar climate and vegetation.

So far, so good. But in the second segment, the film falters badly by
devoting almost the entire hour to a day in November 1532, when 168
Spaniards led by the conquistador Francisco Pizarro massacred 7,000
Incans in the highlands of Peru and captured their emperor, Ataxalpa.
This horrific episode is intended to demonstrate how the Spaniards'
skills on horseback (the horse being one of the 14 domesticated
animals), combined with their technological ability to produce swords
of fine tempered steel, could overcome the superior numbers of
Ataxalpa's 80,000-man army. Yet despite several entertaining sequences
featuring a swashbuckling expert swordsman and horseback rider who
demonstrates how the conquistadors cut down the Incas, we are also
told that the Spaniards attacked a peaceful gathering and that
Ataxalpa had made the fatal decision not to arm his men with their
bronze weapons that day. This raises at least two questions: First,
whether the Spaniards would have won had they faced Ataxalpa's army in
a real battle. Second, why, even if the Europeans did have the ability
to wipe out the Incans, they were willing to carry out such terrible
acts. Is conquest of other peoples a logical outcome of technological
superiority? Today, most of us would argue against any such notion.
Here lies a major weakness in Diamond's entire thesis--it fails to
explain the conscious decisions that humans make when they resort to
violent conquest.

In the third and final hour, Diamond travels to Africa--as indeed he
must if the film is to be honest to its message. His quest takes him
to a town in northern Zambia, one of the world's poorest countries,
where both AIDS and malaria are taking a devastating toll. While
talking to a malaria expert in a clinic where up to seven children die
each day, Diamond suddenly breaks down in sobs. The moment is genuine,
spontaneous, and moving; the decision of the filmmakers to leave it in
is, of course, a deliberate one. Yet I think it was the correct
decision. Whether Diamond is right or wrong about the reason, much of
the world's population is suffering terribly from disease, warfare,
and other causes. And no matter what the causes, something has to be
done about that suffering. Diamond himself makes this point at the end
of the film:

…the message is a hopeful one; it's not a deterministic, fatalistic
one that says forget about Africa and underdeveloped areas. It says
there are specific reasons why different parts of the world ended up
as they did, and with understanding of those reasons, we can use that
knowledge to help the places that historically were at a disadvantage.

That, at any rate, is a statement that most everyone can agree upon.

References

1 J. Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
(Norton, New York, 1997).

2 See www.provost.cornell.edu/g_g_s.htm.

3 P. Lawrence, Road Belong Cargo: A Study of the Cargo Movement in the
Southern Madang District, New Guinea (Manchester Univ. Press,
Manchester, UK, 1964).

Michael Balter is a Paris-based writer for Science and the author of
The Goddess and the Bull: Catalhoyuk, An Archaeological Journey to the
Dawn of Civilization.
Back to News     
-- 
Jim Devine
"Science is the belief in the ignorance of the experts" -- Richard Feynman

Reply via email to