Norman Angell

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Sir Ralph Norman Angell Lane (born December 26, 1872 – died October 7, 1967) was an English lecturer, writer, and peace activist, who wrote famous The Great Illusion (1910) and activelly engaged to bring world peace. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1933.

Life

Norman Angell was born in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom, as one of six children of Thomas Angell Lane and Mary Brittain. He attended the Lycée de St. Omer in France, and the University of Geneva. At the age of 17, he moved to the United States and spent seven years working in California, including as a cowboy, vine planter, an irrigation-ditch digger, and a mailman, eventually becoming a reporter for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and later the San Francisco Chronicle.

He returned to England briefly in 1898 to tend to a family business, but then moved to Paris, France where he engaged in newspaper work. He first became a sub-editor of the English language Daily Messenger, and then a columnist of Éclair. He was also working as a correspondent for some American newspapers, following the Dreyfus case and covering the Spanish-American War. He published his first book Patriotism under Three Flags: A Plea for Rationalism in Politics in 1903. From 1905 to 1912 he was the Paris editor for the Daily Mail.

In 1909 he published a book, Europe's Optical Illusion, which he later renamed the Great Illusion. The book immediately became bestseller, being translated into twenty-five languages and sold over two million copies. It gave rise to a theory popularly called “Norman Angellism”. Angell established the Garton Foundation, receiving the financial support from the industrialist Richard Garton and Joseph Rowntree. In 1913 he founded the pacifist journal, War and Peace, the contributors to which included Arthur Ponsonby and Ramsay MacDonald.

At the start of the World War I, he formed the Neutrality League and advocated for Great Britain to stay out of the war. He later joined the Union of Democratic Control, which actively propagated against the war.

After the war and over the next forty one years Angell published more than forty books, on the topics of economy, politics, and international affairs. In 1920 he joined the Labour Party in Britain and served as a Labor Member of Parliament and member of the Consultative Committee of the Parliamentary Labor Party, from 1929 to 1931. He declined to participate in the re-elections, believing that he could better serve public good without political affiliation.

From 1928 to 1931 he edited popular newspaper Foreign Affairs. He was knighted for public service in 1931. Among his numerous memberships were the Council of the Royal Institute of International Affairs, an executive member of the World Committee against War and Fascism, an active member of the Executive Committee of the League of Nations Union, and president of the Abyssinia Association. In 1933 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Angell continued to deliver lectures long after his retirement. At the age of ninety he traveled to the United States on a two-month lecture tour.

He died in 1967, at the age of ninety-four, in a home for the aged in Croydon, United Kingdom. He never married.

Work

Angell is mostly remembered for his 1909 work, Europe's Optical Illusion, renamed to The Great Illusion as the American edition. In it Angell argued that war between modern powers was futile in the sense that no matter what the outcome, both the losing and the victorious nations would be economically worse off than they would have been had they avoided war. He said:

”Are we, in blind obedience to primitive instincts and old prejudices, enslaved by the old catchwords and that curious indolence which makes the revision of old ideas unpleasant, to duplicate indefinitely on the political and economic side a condition from which we have liberated ourselves on the religious side? Are we to continue to struggle, as so many good men struggled in the first dozen centuries of Christendom — spilling oceans of blood, wasting mountains of treasure — to achieve what is at bottom a logical absurdity, to accomplish something which, when accomplished, can avail us nothing, and which, if it could avail us anything, would condemn the nations of the world to never-ending bloodshed a nd the constant defeat of all those aims which men, in their sober hours, know to be alone worthy of sustained endeavor?” (The Great Illusion, 1913).

He claimed that even if Germany won the war and established political control over the rest of Europe, it would gain nothing economically. Workers in the newly subjected countries would still have to receive their salaries, and commodities would have to be purchased at market prices. Nothing would change, and common people would gain nothing from being part of a larger nation. Even worse, their economical situation would decline, as the welfare and benefits would descend due to the inability to provide for the extended population.

The book gave rise to "Norman Angellism," the theory that holds that "military and political power give a nation no commercial advantage, and it is impossible for one nation to enrich itself by subjugating another."

Throughout his whole life Angell was a classical liberal and has opposed Marxist theory that war was the product of capitalism. He also rejected some Labour Party members’ belief that economical depression was the result of capitalism, and thus the capitalism needs to be abolished.

Angell actively opposed World War I. He believed that a lasting peace cannot be achieved based on economical or military power and the right of conquest, but only based on the mutual partnership. He thus propagated the belief that only negotiations and talk could lead to solution of the problem. He said:

”The fight for ideals can no longer take the form of fight between nations, because the lines of division on moral questions are within the nations themselves and intersect the political frontiers. There is no modern State which is completely Catholic or Protestant, or liberal or autocratic, or aristocratic or democratic, or socialist or individualist; the moral and spiritual struggles of the modern world go on between citizens of the same State in unconscious intellectual cooperation with corresponding groups in other states, not between the public powers of rival States.” (The Great Illusion, 1913).

In the interwar period he wrote against dictatorship and opposed some American political currents that wanted to back Stalin in his confrontations with Churchill. In his Peace with the Dictators? (1938) he attacked the policy of the British Conservative party that was condoning Japanese and Italian aggression. During the Cold War he actively opposed communist ideology.

Some have contested that the two World Wars that took place after The Great Illusion was published, were in fact a tragic confirmation of his thesis. The losers in the war got nothing but grief, while winner were forced to rethink and restructure their influence, getting ultimately nothing back, except millions of death, huge debts, and broken economy. Other historians have argued that Angell disregarded the reality of the complex situation in Europe with its alliances, hatreds and rivalries between nations and therefore he was being utopian.

Legacy

Originally published in 1909 as a short essay, The Great Illusion grew to become a bestseller, sold over 2 million copies and translated into 25 languages. It had tremendous impact on contemporary intelligence and gave rise to "Norman Angellism," the theory that was used by numerous theorists on international peace who advocated the futility of war. The book is still often cited in the contemporary literature of the 21st century, especially by those who oppose current American foreign policy. Norman Angell wrote almost 50 books during his lifetime and actively engaged in bringing world peace. He received Nobel Peace Prize for those efforts.

Publications

  • Angell, Norman. 1903. Patriotism under Three Flags: A Plea for Rationalism in Politics. London: T.F. Unwin
  • Angell, Norman. 1909. Europe's Optical Illusion. Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent
  • Angell, Norman. 1928. The Money Game. London: J.M. Dent.
  • Angell, Norman. 1932. The Unseen Assassins. London: Hamish Hamilton.
  • Angell, Norman. 1934. The Menace to Our National Defence. London: Hamish Hamilton
  • Angell, Norman. 1938. Peace with the Dictators? New York: Harper & Brothers
  • Angell, Norman. 1947. The Steep Places. London: Hamilton
  • Angell, Norman. 1951. After All: The autobiography of Norman Angell. Farrar, Straus and Young.
  • Angell, Norman. 1972 (original published in 1921). The Fruits of Victory. Garland Pub. ISBN 0824002547
  • Angell, Norman. 1972 (original published in 1933). The Great Illusion - 1933. Ayer Co Pub. ISBN 0405045999
  • Angell, Norman. 2003 (original published in 1929). The Story of Money. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 0766160661
  • Angell, Norman. 2006 (original published in 1910). The Great Illusion. Obscure Press. ISBN 1846645417

References
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External links

Credits

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