Humankind
A Hopeful History – from the presenter of the 2025 BBC ‘Moral Revolution’ Reith lectures
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Description
The major new book from Dutch historian and internationally bestselling author Rutger Bregman
An optimistic historian sifts through the past in his mission to prove that mankind might not be so bad . . . A superb read - brisk, accessible and full of great stories
This is the book we need right now . . . Entertaining, uplifting . . . If Bregman is right, this book might just make the world a kinder place
Here, we visit the blitz,
Lord of the Flies
– both the novel and a very different real-life version – a Siberian fox farm, an infamous New York murder and a host of discredited psychological studies . . . There’s a great deal of reassuring human decency to be taken from this bold and thought-provoking book . . . It makes a welcome change to read such a sustained and enjoyable tribute to our better natures
Filled with compelling tales of human goodness . . . Bregman’s book is a thrilling read and it represents a necessary correction
Humankind displays [Bregman's] gift for synthesising libraries full of academic research into spellbinding reads. I whizzed through Humankind’s 480 pages, engrossed
The notion that we already have the capacity to radically improve the world is both an exhilarating and a daunting one
Bregman argues convincingly that what we teach and report about ourselves, we become . . . Bold, entertaining and uplifting
Bregman’s book is something of a beacon at the moment, when many are looking for values to profess in our traumatised and altered society . . . People have started to talk about this book: perhaps the moment of this entirely positive, heartening message is about to come
Lively and illuminating . . . Even a few months ago, [the idea that most people behave well in most circumstances] might have seemed, as Bregman claims, “a radical idea”. The coronavirus crisis has made it blindingly obvious
This book must be read by as many people as possible - only when people change their view of human nature will they begin to believe in the possibility of building a better world
One of the most powerful books I have read for a long time, and a book I have absolutely no hesitation about saying everyone needs to read, and that it will change your life if you do so
Rutger Bregman’s extraordinary new book is a revelation . . .
Humankind
is masterful in its grasp of history, both ancient and modern
Cynicism is a theory of everything, but, as Rutger Bregman brilliantly shows, an elective one. This necessary book widens the aperture of possibility for a better future, and radically
This important book is almost preternatural in its timing and argument. Rutger Bregman is poetic in his rejection of a Hobbesian view of our true natures. The gigantic upheavals of 2020 have proved him right. Reading this during lockdown changed the way I think about our humanity. We are good
Rutger Bregman is out on his own, thinking for himself, using history to give the rest of us a chance to build a much better future than we can presently imagine
A devastating demolition of the misanthrope’s mantra. A beacon of hope for a frighted world
Rutger Bregman, a historian and writer at the
Correspondent
, is one of Europe’s most prominent young thinkers. His last book,
Utopia for Realists
, was a
Sunday Times
and
New York Times
bestseller and has been translated into thirty-two languages. He lives in Holland.
@rcbregman | rutgerbregman.com