I’ve recently powered through this fantastic book during my
rare downtime studying a CELTA course in Thailand. I’m usually quite a slow
reader, but Prisoners of Geography is
so engaging that I reached the end in no time and was left wishing there was
more of the world to cover.
The premise of Tim Marshall’s new book is simple: our world
is governed by geography more than we know. Perhaps that seems obvious; perhaps
it seems an overstatement. Yet Marshall makes a good case that our present
geopolitical situation is dictated by largely the same forces that ancient
nations abided.
Geography has always been a
prison of sorts – one that defines what a nation is or can be, and one from which
our world leaders have often struggled to break free.
He goes from Russia to China to the USA, visiting India and
Pakistan, Korea and Japan, and even the Arctic, explaining why our world is
shaped the way it is. References are made, fittingly, to Jared Diamond’s work,
which I reviewed here last month. His observations on politics and history are
astute, and his descriptions of planet’s geographical features are wonderful.
Often Marshall acknowledges the absurdity of the nation
state, which is fundamentally a prison of its own, applied forcefully to the
world by the European powers, and which chokes us and causes untold destruction
today. One passage I loved from this book illuminates that point:
The notion that a man from a
certain area could not travel across a region to see a relative from the same
tribe unless he had a document, granted to him by a third man he didn’t know in
a faraway town, made little sense. The idea that the document was issued
because a foreigner had said the area was now two regions and had made up names
for them made no sense at all and was contrary to the way in which life had
been lived for centuries.
Marshall seems pre-occupied with the potential for
cataclysmic global war and points out numerous places on the globe where it
could happen, although he does end on a more hopeful note, looking off into
space – where we are finally free of our geographic prison.