The Real Stuff of History: Hanno, Niger, The Conquest of the Maya and Nine Against the Unknown

Mitchell’s abiding interest in history and prehistory was a concomitant of his overarching commitment to human rights. This chapter studies the impulse underlying his dedication to the Diffusionist school of history, which most importantly served as a moral prop for his belief in human goodness. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Malcolm, William K.
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Liverpool University Press 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789620627.003.0003
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Summary:Mitchell’s abiding interest in history and prehistory was a concomitant of his overarching commitment to human rights. This chapter studies the impulse underlying his dedication to the Diffusionist school of history, which most importantly served as a moral prop for his belief in human goodness. The four full-length history books that he published span his writing career and testify to the continuity of his ideological preoccupations, expressly with the welfare of the ordinary people and with the responsibilities of mankind with regard to safeguarding the rights of ethnic peoples and respecting the natural environment. His anti-imperialist sensibility is evident in his promotion of the rights of the peasant. This runs right through his biography of Mungo Park, with whom the author keenly empathises as son to a smallscale Scottish farmer, and his study of the pre-Columbian theocracies in his most academic treatise The Conquest of the Maya right up to his study of Fridtjof Nansen, which closes his final volume Nine Against the Unknown , hailed as the champion and embodiment of the most inspiring ethical, environmental, political and philosophical values.