Bandits

Back in print, the groundbreaking classic on the robber-rebel from “the popular people’s historian who has influenced our understanding of the previous three centuries like no other” (The Boston Globe)

“An utterly fascinating book.” —The New Yorker

First published in 1969, this now-classic book inspired a whole new field of historical study and brought its author popular acclaim. Bandits transcend the label of criminals; they are robbers and outlaws elevated to the status of avengers and champions of social justice. Some, like Robin Hood, Rob Roy, and Jesse James, are famous throughout the world, the stuff of story and myth. Others, like Balkan haiduks, Indian dacoits, and Brazilian congaceiros, are known only to their own countrymen.

In his celebrated study of these fascinating figures, Eric Hobsbawm, “one of the few genuinely great historians of our century” (The New Republic), spans four hundred years and four continents, setting these historical figures against the ballads, legends, and films they have inspired. The result is “a dazzling historical squib, fizzling with ideas and strange stories” (The Guardian).

For this new edition Hobsbawm has substantially extended and revised his original text. It appears at a time when the disintegration of state power is once again introducing fertile conditions for banditry to flourish in many parts of the world.

Praise

“A wise as well as exciting book; a very valuable addition to the history of mentalities and to that of popular protest. . . . This is human history at its very best.”
The Times Literary Supplement
“In an age of narrow specialists, Eric Hobsbawm remains the supreme generalist. . . . For sheer intelligence he has no superior in the historical profession.”
—Sir Keith Thomas
“A dazzling historical squib, fizzing with ideas and strange stories.”
The Guardian

Books by Eric Hobsbawm

Fractured Times
Culture and Society in the Twentieth Century

Eric Hobsbawm

On Empire
America, War, and Global Supremacy

Eric Hobsbawm

Industry and Empire
The Birth of the Industrial Revolution

Eric Hobsbawm

Goodreads Reviews