Reviews for The square and the tower : networks and power, from the Freemasons to Facebook

Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Ferguson's (senior fellow, Hoover Inst.; Colossus: The Rise and Fall of the American Empire) comprehensive history uses a new perspective. Generally speaking, history has been written by those from the hierarchical, ruling class. However, most innovation and revolution begins in the "square," where the majority of people live. Within that square are the networks and organizations that lead to change. Ferguson uses theoretical concepts, including degrees of separation and weak ties, to show that networks throughout history have been as important as powerful individuals in the tower. Secret and not-so-secret societies (such as the Illuminati and Freemasons) are discussed, as they were carriers of information when those in the tower chose which versions of history were recorded. This book also describes the historical events leading to the creation of Silicon Valley. Readers of any historical time period will relish this new lens upon which events can be viewed. VERDICT An excellent addition to any collection on the nature of networks, information flow, and secret societies.-Jason L. Steagall, Gateway Technical Coll. Lib., Elkhorn, WI © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Communications breakthroughs drive a centuries-long war between monolithic power and connected innovators in this sweeping conceptual history of the modern world. Historian Ferguson (The Ascent of Money) examines several turns in the ever-shifting relationship between entrenched hierarchies and upstart "networks": the 15th-century invention of the printing press enabled Protestants to challenge the Catholic Church and Enlightenment intellectuals and revolutionaries to overthrow monarchies; the advent of railroads, telegraphs, and radio allowed some bureaucratic states to become totalitarian dictatorships in the 20th century; the rise of the internet undermined hierarchical corporate and government control while empowering network monopolies such as Facebook. Ferguson's episodic narrative explores these themes through vivid profiles of influential networks, from the 18th-century Illuminati (far more feckless than their conspiratorial reputation suggests) to the Rothschild banking empire, Cambridge University's Apostles circle (an incubator of avant-garde literature, gay sex, and espionage), and Wikileaks. Ferguson's occasional use of mathematical network-theory charts and jargon ("In terms of betweenness centrality, the king came first") doesn't add much to his analysis; still, his typically bold rethinking of historical currents, painted on the broadest canvas, offers many stimulating insights on the tense interplay between order, oppression, freedom, and anarchy. Photos. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Until the twentieth century, virtually all histories were written as top-down accounts, with the emphasis upon kings, queens, generals, and religious and economic elites. More recently, bottom-up historians have strived to include the roles played by the middle and lower classes. Both approaches can be termed hierarchical. Renowned and sometimes controversial historian Ferguson proposes an alternative approach. He asserts that networks have long challenged and often surmounted in power and influence vertical hierarchies (the tower). These networks (the square) are horizontal, often crossing lines of class, religion, and ethnicity. They can be formal or informal and are often leaderless. Today, of course, the Internet and social media show the pervasive power of a technologically based network. But networks, Ferguson asserts, are as old as civilization, and he offers examinations of intriguing examples. There's the Illuminati, originating in eighteenth-century Germany; aristocratic networks in the late Roman Republic; and various religious networks, including the earliest forms of Christianity and Islam. Ferguson has written a provocative and intellectually challenging work that should promote consideration and debate among academics and laypersons.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2017 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Renowned economic historian Ferguson (Kissinger: 1923-1968: The Idealist, 2015, etc.) draws on insights from network theory to examine disruptions across time.Governments and other hierarchies are stable, suggests the author, building on insights by Henry Kissinger, to the extent that they are flexible in the face of changing conditions. So it was that, for instance, mid-19th-century Europe enjoyed several decades of unwonted peace, having reached a way of accommodating "the old hierarchies of hereditary rule and the new networks of globalization." As political stances became entrenched, with a unified Germany in constant opposition to France, the inflexibility reduced political and diplomatic maneuverability, and war followed. As Ferguson notes, networks have tended to disrupt hierarchy even though networks do not necessarily possess much power themselves. Writing about his own situation as a well-placed intellectual with affiliations to places like Harvard and Stanford, he notes that he doesn't even have the authority to decide who gets into his classes. What is more important is the structure of the network, with gatekeepers who, in essence, determine what information is admitted and what information is releasedinformation that sometimes has revolutionary, hierarchy-breaking capabilities. Ferguson, a noted conservative, is refreshingly evenhanded. In discussing the viral qualities of conspiracy theory, for instance, it's clear that he regards conspiracymongers such as Alex Jones as noxious twerps while admitting, "this may be lunatic, but lunacy that appeals to more than a fringe." It is also clear that the author admires networkers more than hierarchs such as the current presidentwho, as he points out, insists, "characteristically," that his New York tower has 10 more floors than it really does. By the same token, Ferguson is scornful of hierarchs who use the tools of networkers ineptly, such as the data mavens who botched the Affordable Care Act computer systems.Making profitable use of information science, Ferguson offers a novel way of examining data that will be highly intriguing to students of history and current affairs. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Back