Introduction: Thompson at 100
Paulo Fontes
Professor in the History Institute at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)
Brazil
On February 3, 2024, Edward Palmer Thompson would turn 100 years old. One of the twentieth century’s greatest historians, his work has had an enormous impact on the construction of social history and on historiographical and political debates since the 1960s. The reach of the books, articles, reflections, and political activities of the British Marxist historian has gone far beyond social labor history, the field that distinguished him, and has fostered discussions within a myriad of areas of historical knowledge and social theories.
In Brazil, the work of E. P. Thompson fundamentally influenced contemporary historiography. Without understanding the Thompsonian impact on our country, it is not possible to understand the advances we have made in labor history (of “free” and the enslaved, urban and rural, “formal” and “informal” work), in reflections on historical diversities of gender, race, and generations, and in historiographical debates at large.
To celebrate Thompson’s centenary, the portal of the Laboratory for Studies in History of the Worlds of Labor at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (LEHMT/UFRJ) has launched the Thompson at 100 Dossier. We invited historians and social scientists from around the world, who, in short articles, wrote about the influence of Thompson’s work (or in some cases, of Thompson himself) on their personal production and/ or on the historiography of their countries, and themes reflecting on relevance of the British historian today. The dossier is published in Portuguese and English and will continue to receive new articles throughout this year.
Edited by Paulo Fontes, the dossier reveals a “global Thompson” by initially bringing together 20 unpublished and exclusive articles by 21 authors of 13 nationalities (Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Germany, India, Italy, New Zealand, Turkey, South Africa, United Kingdom and United States), from the 5 continents. In addition to different origins, the authors come from different generations, thematic interests, and theoretical approaches.
The articles show us the strength, originality, and profound relevance of his work, while also pointing out various debates and criticisms that have been addressed over time. It is particularly interesting to understand the differences and similarities in the receptions of Thompson’s works, and reflections on class formation, culture, religion, agency, Marxism, and market economy, among others, in contexts as different as those of several countries in the North Global, from the Latin American and Turkish dictatorships, from the State of Emergency in India, or from South African apartheid. Furthermore, the various dimensions of Thompson’s life – as an anti-fascist communist activist, a popular educator, a central figure in the construction of the New Left, a pacifist leader, a university professor, a theatrical and charismatic speaker – are remembered by many and yielded juicy stories that will certainly capture the attention of our readers.
Finally, I would like to thank immensely the authors who kindly and, as a rule, enthusiastically, agreed to write for this dossier. The LEHMT/UFRJ team and translator Eneida Sela also deserve special thanks. The idea for the dossier was conceived at the beginning of 2024 and carried out, in a true tour de force, in around a month! This dossier is a clear demonstration that it is not only E. P. Thompson’s ideas and works that serve as an inspiration, but also his enthusiasm, energy, and struggle to transform the world.
Summary
E. P. Thompson and Paulo Freire: Historical Agency and Popular Education
Alexandre Fortes
Looking Inside, Looking Beyond: E.P. Thompson and the Study of Societies
Andrea Caracausi
Learning from E.P. Thompson
Ángela Vergara
Dorothy Thompson, comrade historian
Antonio Luigi Negro
E.P. Thompson at Queen’s University, Canada, 1988
Bryan Palmer
A Thompson Moment in the late 1970s
Chitra Joshi
E.P. Thompson and the social history in the making
Christian De Vito
“Under a satanic light:” Argentine readings of The Making of The English Working Class
Cristiana Schettini e Martín Albornoz
E.P.Thompson in South Africa
Edward Webster
The making of time and of history: In E.P. Thompson’s shadow
Fady Labib
Five episodes from a two-decade-long academic walk with E. P. Thompson
Görkem Akgöz
Lessons from EPT: Scaling the Heights from the Ground
Leon Fink
Thompson Arrives at the Unicamp
Michael M. Hall
Edward Thompson’s Major Impact and Rich Legacy
Neville Kirk
Thompson between the Marxist Tradition and Historiographical Modernity: an Argentine Testimony
Omar Acha
Edward Thompson, presente!
Peter Linebaugh
On Reading E.P. Thompson’s ‘The Making of the English Working Class’
Sheila Rowbotham
E. P. Thompson, the Egg, and Slavery in Brazil
Silvia Lara
Thompson at 100: an Anglo-German view
Stefan Berger
For an expanded global history from below
Toby Boraman
Team
Editor: Paulo Fontes
Design and layout: Deivison Amaral and Larissa Farias
Graphic design: Brenda Dias and Eduarda Gabrielle Olimpio
Image Research: Thompson Clímaco
General publicity: Ana Clara Tavares
Translations: Eneida Sela