Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Review of Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash from 1600 to the Present by Fareed Zakaria

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Sociology
Book Club Event = Book List (07/18/2026)


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“Liberal democracy is about rules, not outcomes.  We uphold freedom of speech, rather than favoring specific speech.  We want elections to be free and fair, rather than favoring one candidate.  We make law by census and compromise, not by decree.  But increasingly there are those – frustrated by the process, sure of their virtue, loathing the other side – who want to ban what they regard as “bad” speech, make policy by fiat, or even manipulate the democratic process.  The ends justify the means.” – Fareed Zakaria, Introduction: A Multitude Of Revolutions, Page 11

 

“But it was only after the Dutch Revolution, when the Netherlands broke with the Catholic Church, that the country truly became an open marketplace of ideas.  The general distaste for Inquisitors and censors allowed philosophical strains that would have been repressed elsewhere to flourish.  As a deadening blanket of repression and censorship known as the Counter-Reformation fell across Catholic Europe, Protestant societies began producing significantly more scientists than their Catholic counterparts.” – Fareed Zakaria, Chapter 1: The First Liberal Revolution: The Netherlands, Page 46

 

“Above all, the French Revolution shows the danger of revolution imposed by political leaders, rather than growing naturally out of broad social, economic, and technological changes.  French leaders tried to impose modernity and enlightenment by top-down decree on a country that was largely unready for it.  The core problem was this: modernization takes decades if not centuries to develop.  In those countries where liberalism had taken deep root, it had developed by fits and starts, in the Netherlands’ city halls and merchant associations or in England’s parliamentary committees and joint-stock companies.  It had grown through a bottom-up process of economic and technological transformation, coupled later with skillful leadership that navigated these new currents.” – Fareed Zakaria, Chapter 3: The Failed Revolution: France, Page 75


Review

Is This An Overview?

A revolution is about change.  Change can have benefits, but also disruptions.  People want change when their conditions would improve, but disruptions cause a backlash.  People want to retain their condition when the disruptions cause a deterioration in their situation, such as through allocating resources away to others.  Societies develop over time, changing over time.  Societies can be torn apart when the society cannot abord the disruptions.  Although there is no certainty to what happens to societies, much of what happens next depends on human action and interaction over time.

 

The historic experience of states, the various different methods that states used to achieve their status, has provided guidelines for what can improve welfare and what can harm welfare.  States improve their welfare when political power is diffused.  When society is based on rules rather than outcomes.  When laws are made by consensus and compromise rather than decree.  When there is free speech rather than censorship.  When there are competitive elections rather than a candidate forced unto a people.   When the private and public sectors support each other.  Societies fought through various conflicts to obtain these features.  Even as states have improved through the features, the same states have changed to prevent the features.  There are those who benefit from restricting what others do and think, and want to dictate the terms others live by. 

 

Caveats?

The book is split into a few historic revolutions and a few contemporary revolutions.  While the historic revolutions have coherent timeline for events that includes a conclusion, the contemporary revolutions are still progressing which makes their conclusions uncertain.  There is a bias in the features that are meant to improve or hinder society, which influence explanations for content.  


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•What is a revolution?
•What is liberal democracy? 
•What is illiberalism?
•What are the disruptions to change?
•How should societies change?
•What caused the division between Left and Right?
•How does geography affect politics?
•What is the purpose of the Olympics?
•How to divide people?
•What is gunboat diplomacy? 
•How did changes in transportation change the world?
•What is Neoliberalism? 
•How have changes in communication and information, changed the world?
•What happened to American power?
•What happened to Venice?
•What happened to the Netherlands?
•How did the French elite think of the Netherlands?
•What caused the Industrial Revolution?
•What happened to England?
•What happened to France?


Book Details
Edition:                   First Edition
Publisher:               W. W. Norton
Edition ISBN:         9781324089353
Pages to read:          304
Publication:             2024
1st Edition:              2024
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          5
Overall          5