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From:
[log in to unmask] (Ross Emmett)
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:19:22 2006
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----------------- HES POSTING ----------------- 
Published by EH.NET (September 2003) 
 
Nicholas Dawidoff, _The Fly Swatter: How My Grandfather Made His Way in the World_. New
York: Pantheon, 2002. ix + 353 pp. $26 (cloth), ISBN: 0-375-40027-3.
 
Reviewed for EH.NET by Carl Mosk, Department of Economics, University of Victoria.
<[log in to unmask]>
 
Alexander -- a.k.a. Sasha, Sashura, Shura -- Gerschenkron, Professor of Economic History
at Harvard from the late 1940s through the mid-1970s, loved parables. Indeed, it is
apparent from this moving account penned by his grandson, Nicholas Dawidoff -- author of
several books and contributor to the _New Yorker_ and the _New York Times Magazine_ --
that he viewed his own life as a parable. Shura's unpublished memoir was entitled "The
Uses of Adversity." There is little doubt that Shura extolled the virtues of character
steeled through adversity, character forged through prodigious dedication and hard work.
One of his favorite stories was of his dying weakened dog Tracy, who was being driven to
the veterinarian's office to be put down. Tracy kept fighting to climb up onto the back
seat, only to keep falling back, Gerschenkron refusing to assist his efforts. A last
extraordinary effort brought success. Dawidoff (p. 256) recounts Gerschenkron's telling of
the tale thusly: "This way he had accomplished something momentous, and all of his own. It
was his achievement, to take with him into death. Greatness ... was possible, but only
possible if you made it possible."
 
Shura's early and middle years were surely filled with great adversity, great dedication
and great effort, crowned with the most improbable and unexpected successes. He was twice
uprooted and plunged into exile. In the early 1920s his family fled Bolshevik purges of
the rich; in the late 1930s Shura and his Austrian wife, Erica, fled Nazi purges of Jews
and Social Democrats, only to end up in Berkeley as a research assistant for Charles
Gulick. Through all of this his commitment to reading and learning remained unabated,
whether he read and wrote in German or English. During World War II his vast knowledge of
Europe and Russia paid off: he was invited to work for the Foreign Affairs Section of the
Federal Reserve. Then Harvard called.
 
At Harvard Shura became the Great Gerschenkron, simultaneously revered and feared for his
boundless erudition, his unceasing search for knowledge, and his mastery of language after
language. At Harvard, during the 1950s and 1960s, he developed the theory of how economic
backwardness afforded advantages that might -- or might not -- be mobilized by late
developers; and he put together the Economic History Workshop which became one of the
intellectual crucibles of Cliometrics.
 
In Dawidoff's telling Shura's most important publication, the 1966 collection of essays,
_Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective_, embodied key concepts of his parable of
character. With backwardness comes adversity, but also opportunities. The more backward a
country, the more rapidly it could develop, and it did not necessarily have to blindly
emulate earlier developers. It could exploit a "pattern of substitutes" for the "missing
prerequisites for industrialization" enjoyed by the United Kingdom during the eighteenth
century.
 
Character was also crucial to Gerschenkron's ability to build a seminar that promoted the
New Economic History. Dawidoff maintains that it was Shura's colorful character -- his
studied cultivation of literature and chess; his recounting of his wartime days working in
shipyards of Richmond, California as a shipfitter and flanger; and his extolling the joys
of following the Red Sox on a transistor radio -- that ultimately served as a magnet to
the talented graduate students who poured into the Economic History Workshop.
 
But Dawidoff's parable of Shura's life is not simply a celebration of triumphant character
won through adversity. He recounts a darker side: too much reading, too much erudition,
prevented Gerschenkron from writing a one great book, a massive summation: no economic
history of Russia issued from his pen, rather essays and collections of lectures in the
main. And sometimes cultivating character became a con. True, Shura did charm Marlene
Dietrich; true he played chess with -- and was beaten by -- Marcel Duchamp. But Ted
Williams of the Red Sox was not a personal friend, even though Shura claimed that it was
Ted Williams who informed him that Galbraith was "a high fly ball to shallow left field."
 
Finally one comes away from reading this fine volume with a question about the parable
most relevant to Gerschenkron. Might it not be: there's nothing like good luck? Knowing
German and Russian did not hurt during World War II and the onset of the Cold War;
presiding over a seminar in Economic History at one of the most prestigious universities
in the world during a period when university enrollments were soaring throughout the
English-speaking world also didn't hurt. That said, it would be churlish to completely
reject Shura's parable of character created through struggle with adversity as a theory,
of economic development and the development of scholarship alike.
 
Carl Mosk is Professor of Economics at the University of Victoria. His most recent book is
_Japanese Industrial History: Technology, Urbanization and Economic Growth_ (2001). He is
currently doing research on international political economy.
 
Copyright (c) 2003 by EH.Net. All rights reserved. This work may be copied for non-profit
educational uses if proper credit is given to the author and the list. For other
permission, please contact the EH.Net Administrator ([log in to unmask]; Telephone: 513-
529-2851; Fax: 513-529-3308). Published by EH.Net (September 2003). All EH.Net reviews are
archived at http://www.eh.net/BookReview
 
 
 
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