Multitudes: How Crowds Made the Modern World

Multitudes: How Crowds Made the Modern World

by Dan Hancox
Multitudes: How Crowds Made the Modern World

Multitudes: How Crowds Made the Modern World

by Dan Hancox

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on October 22, 2024

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Overview

In praise of collective joy: what happens when we come together?

Modern history is the history of the crowd. But why are we so frightened of what happens when we come together? Philosophers, politicians and psychologist pronounce that they are dangerous and need to be controlled. In contrast, Hancox argues that they are the harbinger of and a force for change, the bringer of joy and conviviality.

In the 1870s, following the Paris Commune, Gustave Le Bon was the first to claim that the crowd was a dangerous animal that consumed individuals. Since then his thinking has influenced city building, policing, criminology and politics. From scenes of the Nuremburg Rally to the January 6 insurrection on the Capitol, the contagion of mob violence is palpable. They can be dangerous. But the crowd can also be a place of liberation, passion, collective joy. The politicians are so afraid of what happens that they will do whatever they can to keep us apart.

In Multitudes, Dan Hancox celebrates the history of the crowd.  The crowd is the human embodiment of democracy. It is a testament to the incredible things that happen when we gather with strangers in pursuit of a common goal - whether that is to throw a rave, or overthrow a dictator. We will see how crowds have the power to change history, and how joining crowds changes us for the better, too.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781804294512
Publisher: Verso Books
Publication date: 10/22/2024
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 288

About the Author

Dan Hancox is a native Londoner who writes about music, politics, gentrification, social exclusion, protest and the margins of urban life, chiefly for the Guardian, but also the New York Times, Vice, The Fader, Dazed & Confused and XXL.

Table of Contents

Preface: El Carnaval de Cádiz


Introduction: The Age of the Crowd
1. Paris Is Burning: Revolutionary Crowds
2. The Nuremberg Spectacle: Authoritarian Crowds
3. ‘Feral Thugs’: Protest and Riot Crowds
4. Among the Slum People: Football Crowds
5. The World Turned Upside Down: Carnival Crowds
6. The Invention of Modern Life: Urban Crowds
7. Myths and Scapegoats: Fatal Crowds
Conclusion: There to Be a Crowd


Acknowledgements
Notes
Index
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