J. G. A. Pocock
Obituary by Colin Kidd (14 December 2023)
John Pocock, who has died at the age of ninety-nine only a little short of his hundredth birthday, was a giant of the historical profession. Growing up in New Zealand, embarking on research in Britain and spending most of his career in the United States, Pocock made major contributions to the historiography of each of these disparate places, and was a genuinely global historian. Moreover, while many distinguished historians owe their distinction to transformative work in a single field, Pocock transformed several different areas of study.
Along with his friend Quentin Skinner, he forged a contextualist revolution in the history of political thought. Pocock’s particular emphasis was on the recovery of past worlds of discourse; ‘discourse’ indeed suggesting something less static than ‘thought’. Pocock’s doctoral thesis – supervised by Herbert Butterfield – fell not in political thought as such, but within one of Butterfield’s favoured subjects, the history of historiography. The book which emerged from the thesis The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law reconstituted the historical debates of the seventeenth century, between common law antiquaries who championed an immemorial constitution and opponents who constructed an English thèse royale from careful feudalist scholarship. The work had huge implications for legal history, helped to clear away misconceptions about the ideological background to the Glorious Revolution, and established historical and antiquarian treatises as crucial modes of early modern political argument. Pocock broke down disciplinary barriers between the history of political thought and the history of historiography: historiography often provided both the mode and matter of early modern political debate.
However, these achievements far from exhaust Pocock’s original, field-shaping scholarship. In Scotland, Wales and Ireland, Pocock is best known for inaugurating the ‘new British history’. Pocock’s various interventions in the history and historiography of what he termed – as neutrally as possible – the ‘Atlantic archipelago’, showed that there was a history of interactions to be told, between England and its ‘provinces’ and among the peripheral territories of ‘these islands’. Pocock exercised particular influence on the emerging revisionist school of historians which recast the English Civil War as the War of the Three Kingdoms. In America, however, Pocock was best known for The Machiavellian Moment, one of three books – alongside Bernard Bailyn’s Ideological Origins of the American Revolution and Gordon Wood’s The Creation of the American Republic – which decisively overturned the prevailing assumption that America’s founders were Lockean liberals. Bailyn, Wood and Pocock reshaped American historiography by reinserting classical republican themes at the heart of the nation’s founding; their work also informed political scientists and brought about a classical republican turn among constitutional jurists in the law schools.
Latterly, Pocock’s six volume ecology of Gibbon’s History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire proved as rich and multifarious as the original, and – quite deliberately, one assumes – as monumental. Here Pocock provided a fresh account of the Enlightenment, or rather multiple Enlightenments, from which Gibbon emerged; a taxonomy of eighteenth-century European historiographical practices and narrative styles; and a brilliant exposition of both Gibbon’s own milieu, post-Utrecht Europe, and his matter, old world Afro-Eurasia between antiquity and early modernity.
This account of John Pocock’s published work falls some way short of capturing the man himself. Whereas it’s rare enough these days to encounter an academic able to speak in elegant, grammatical sentences, Pocock was a paragon of the lapidary, appearing to speak off the cuff, in seminars and sometimes – alarmingly – even in casual conversation, in perfectly chiselled paragraphs. His speech was oracular, and he himself had a magus-like appearance and aura.
Barbarism and Religion - Edward Gibbon's own phrase - is the title of a sequence of works by John Pocock designed to situate Gibbon, and his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, in a series of contexts in the history of eighteenth-century Europe. A major intervention from one of the world's leading historians, the series challenges the notion of any one 'Enlightenment' and posits instead a plurality of enlightenments, the English being one among many equals.
The J. G. A. Pocock Collection
A Centenary Colloquium
On 9 March 2024, friends and colleagues of J. G. A. Pocock, who would have turned a hundred on the 7th of April, gathered in Parliament Hall at the University of St Andrews (Scotland) to celebrate the life and work of John Pocock, one of the greatest and most influential historians of the 20th century. Watch the video of the event here: