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1486 Reviews of Books PHILIP SCRANTON and PATRICK FRIDENSON. Reimagining Business History. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 2013. Pp. x, 260. Cloth $50.00, paper $24.95. Reimagining Business History is an important and provocative book, not only in terms of business history but also in terms of the wider discipline, as the authors’ plea for greater interaction with other historians. This is perhaps understandable given that the field of business history is not only of recent evolution but also is a house divided between those who think as the authors do and those who want to remain close to business. The book is also unusual in that the authors recommend hopping around among the various sections rather than reading it straight through. That is not the only oddity. The most unusual feature is that the heart of the book can be found in the one-page preface, a brief introduction, and an even briefer afterword. These sections tell us a great deal. Philip Scranton and Patrick Fridenson are senior business history scholars. It is their opinion that a dialogue with fellow historians has to be advanced “in tandem with stepping away from . . . reliance on economics, economic history, and management science” (p. 9). This implies a need to step away from the business community as well. Although the authors contend that there is “no arc of development or critique” (p. ix), no “central spine” (p. 9), no “core directive” (p. 240), there clearly is one. The central core directive of the book is “to broaden the field’s scope and extend its reach” (p. 1) in order to place “business and business history at the center of large events and dynamic processes, as well as at the heart of everyday performances in culture and society” (p. 241). The authors go on to identify three important issues: American hegemony, the European perspective in the field, and globalization. They associate American hegemony with Alfred Chandler and what they call traditional business history. Indeed, one could subtitle this work “Business History Post Chandler.” Chandler was the Isidor Strauss Professor of Business History at the Harvard Business School, a position first established in 1927. While not the first holder of the professorship Chandler is the person who is credited with establishing business history as a discipline, with a focus on the organizational complexity of large corporations. A logical response to the book’s European perspective is to ask about the Asian perspective, since Asia represents a larger part of the global economy than Europe. The authors cover this gap in the afterword by acknowledging ignorance of Asian, Latin American and, I suspect, non-U.S. perspectives. There can be little argument with their contention of the need to understand globalization. However, their dismissal of the centrality of great firms seems a bit of a stretch. Against this backdrop they turn to the body of the book and devote four future-oriented sections dealing with traps to be avoided, opportunities to be explored, prospects to be further explored, and resources to aid future exploration. AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW Each part or section contains ten to twelve entries, ranging anywhere from 1,200 to 2,500 words with some more or less commonsensical suggestions. The part dealing with traps to be avoided concludes with a particularly good section on the “Rush to the Recent,” although the authors’ identification of business schools as the problem is misplaced. There are a number of worthwhile suggestions of opportunities to be explored, including microbusiness, nonprofits and quasi enterprises, as well as the centrality of failure. The section on prospects, which is distinguished from the section on opportunities as areas where scholars are already at work, may well be the most useful section of the four with excellent suggestions around professional services, projects, and the need to reassess classic themes. The fourth and final section deals with resources— concepts and frameworks that the authors hope “may add new tools to the business historian’s constitutive imagination” (pp. 8–9). The entry on memory is especially important, although the suggestions of memories to be probed could well be expanded beyond injustice, deception, and corruption (p. 216). In the afterword the authors quite rightly anticipate that some readers will feel like “tossing this book into a metaphorical fireplace” (p. 24). Nevertheless, it is an important contribution to business history writing in the twenty first century. The book is a clear challenge not only to traditional business history but also to the notion of a grand narrative. The authors have written a common sense “how to” book, which could draw business historians closer to their colleagues in other fields of history. They want to move away from business and business sources, in other words to take the business out of business history. This reviewer respectfully disagrees. Given the importance of business in society it is a field that has been neglected, and that neglect should be corrected. JOE MARTIN University of Toronto MICHAEL SALER. As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality. New York: Oxford University Press. 2012. Pp. x, 283. Cloth $99.00, paper $27.95. In his previous works Michael Saler has questioned the simplistic characterization of modernity as an age of secularism, positivism, and scientism by exploring the subjects of medieval modernism and secular magic. In his latest book, As If, he continues the project through an insightful and entertaining analysis of modern enchantment, specifically on the topic of fictional worlds that took on lives of their own in the imagination of their consumers. As Saler asserts in the first sentence of the book: “The modern West has been called ‘disenchanted,’ but that is a half-truth” (p. 3). We are familiar with enthusiasts of Star Trek, Star Wars, The Lord of the Rings, and Harry Potter forming magazine-based and online communities, writing fan fiction, and gath- DECEMBER 2013 Comparative/World ering in conventions dressed as characters in the stories. Saler shows that this phenomenon of creating “virtual reality” to celebrate and participate in fictional worlds began in the late nineteenth century, as a way of bringing enchantment back to a disenchanted world. The first two chapters of the book provide a succinct historical context of this development, particularly on the subjects of the various ways in which sections of modernist culture reacted against the secularizing and positivist tendency in the fin-de-siècle period, the growing intellectual recognition of the importance of the faculty of the imagination in exploring reality, and the rise and enormous popularity of New Romance literature. The subsequent three chapters deal in detail with the cases of Arthur Conan Doyle’s world of Sherlock Holmes, H. P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, and J. R. R. Tolkien’s Middle-Earth narratives. In the introduction and the initial chapters, Saler asserts that while there have been many fictional worlds and characters that were popular and celebrated prior to the late nineteenth century, they could not garner the following of fans who expressed their enthusiasm by treating them “as if” they were real places and real people because of traditional cultural attitudes toward imagination that regarded the faculty as, at best, suspect. It was only in the modernist period when imagination was appreciated as both an essential tool of understanding and a means to counter the materialist outlook of the age that people felt free to indulge in the enchantment of fantastic fiction. In his elaboration of the cultural and intellectual scene that made modern enchantment possible, Saler introduces useful concepts of “animistic reason,” a form of rationality that works in conjunction with imagination rather than in opposition to it, and “ironic imagination,” through which one indulges in the fantasy of the “reality” of fictional worlds without deluding oneself into believing in its literal actuality. The specific works of fiction that are analyzed originate in New Romance, a literature that encompassed a wide variety of narratives including those of high adventure, detective fiction, horror, science fiction, and fantasy that defied mainstream realist fiction’s primary interest in character and description of everyday life. Saler makes the essential point that while some of those works featured wildly imaginative plots, they managed to capture the imagination of the readers of popular fiction because they also incorporated many writing techniques of realism as well as historical and scientific works. The use of maps in Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island (1883) and H. Rider Haggard’s She (1887), scientific ideas in Lovecraft’s horror stories, and historical chronology and entire linguistic systems in Tolkien’s Middle-Earth books helped readers imagine their worlds as rational as well as fantastic, real as well as fictional. This is different from fantastic works of past eras, which tended to be heavily allegorical or metaphysical with little attempt to provide their worlds with “reality effects.” Saler’s characterization of this Janus-faced rational-fantastic nature of New Romance as its distinguishing feature is insightful, but perhaps it AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW 1487 needed to be contrasted more sharply against earlier fantastic fiction, especially gothic fiction (which Saler only mentions briefly) of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, when the faculty of the imagination was also lauded by late Enlightenment vitalists and romantics, albeit for different intellectual and aesthetic purposes. In the book’s in-depth discussions of Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories, Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, and Tolkien’s Middle-Earth novels, Saler deals with the negative views of such works and their fan-following as forms of “escapism” as well as the embodiment of racist, nationalistic, and irrational ideas. Despite his creation of a character who was described as a “perfect reasoning machine,” Conan Doyle was a spiritualist and a believer in fairies; Lovecraft a xenophobe and a racist; and Tolkien, whose works had a following among white supremacists, a nationalist with a nostalgia for AngloSaxon England. But Saler nuances such views by pointing to the evolving views on race and nationalism on the part of Lovecraft and Tolkien, and the testimony of fans who claimed to have become more engaged with other human beings and concerns of the real world through their love of fictional worlds. This wonderfully enlightening and terrifically wellwritten book finally makes the philosophical point that the practice of indulging in fictional worlds “as if” they were real is not a mere act of escapism but also the consideration of the ever-changing, contingent, and subjective nature of the “real” world that constantly eludes the attempt to describe it as “just so.” MINSOO KANG University of Missouri-St. Louis, and JUSTIN SO Miskatonic University COMPARATIVE/WORLD TUDOR PARFITT. Black Jews in Africa and the Americas. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. 2013. Pp. xiii, 225. Cloth $29.95. Tudor Parfitt is a historian and documentarian whose work over the last thirty years has focused on the Beta Israel of Ethiopia and the State of Israel, where they became known as “Ethiopian Jews.” In his latest book, Parfitt traces the construction of racial identity as applied to blacks and Jews from the Middle Ages to the present day, focusing on sub-Saharan Africa and the United States. This racialized construction developed mainly in Europe but involved the participation of both groups and was imported through colonialism to Africa and the Americas. The majority of this book is a history of ideas, tracing biblical and rabbinical notions of “blackness,” European Christian thoughts about the “blackness of Jews” and the “Jewishness of some blacks,” and finally the internalization of these ideas by the subjects themselves. While Parfitt understands that the imparting of black or Jewish identity can be either sympathetic or DECEMBER 2013