[Marxism] (Fwd) Hobsbawm obituary for John Saville

Patrick Bond pbond at mail.ngo.za
Wed Jun 17 17:43:54 MDT 2009


John Saville

Marxist historian renowned for his great work, the Dictionary of Labour 
Biography

* Eric Hobsbawm
* The Guardian, Tuesday 16 June 2009

John Saville, the socialist economic and social historian who has died 
aged 93, was an academic at Hull University for nearly 40 years, but 
will be remembered above all for the great, open-ended Dictionary of 
Labour Biography (partly co-edited with Joyce Bellamy), of which he was 
able to complete the first 10 volumes (1972-2000), and the three volumes 
of Essays in Labour History (1960, 1971, 1977) co-edited with Asa Briggs 
(Lord Briggs).

He was born John Stamatopoulos, in a Lincolnshire village near 
Gainsborough, to Edith Vessey, from a local working-class family, and 
Orestes Stamatopoulos, a Greek engineer who disappeared from the lives 
of both soon after. His mother's remarriage in London some years after 
the first world war to a widowed tailor, freemason and reader of the 
Daily Mail, to whom she had acted as housekeeper, gave her son a 
comfortable lower-middle-class childhood and the name he later adopted.

He won a scholarship to Royal Liberty school in east London, but in the 
conventional and, until the sixth form, not particularly intellectual, 
schoolboy sportsman there was little to suggest a future in political 
radicalism. But something must have been germinating for, "almost the 
day I arrived" at the London School of Economics in 1934, once again on 
a scholarship, he began to go to leftwing meetings and within two months 
had joined the Communist party, in which he was to remain for the next 
22 years.

Saville left the LSE, then (with Oxford and Cambridge) the major centre 
of student communism, with a first, with the confident and incisive 
manner that became his trademark, in lifelong partnership with Constance 
(Saunders), whom he married in 1943, and with his passion for research 
postponed. He did not return to academic life until 1947, when he began 
to teach economic history at the (then) University College of Hull, 
where he was to remain until retirement from the chair of economic and 
social history in 1982. He continued to live in Hull until a month 
before his death.

Called up in 1940 after a spell of employment, he had the leftwing 
equivalent of a good war: "I had several large-scale quarrels with 
authority, although I was a good and efficient soldier." Against the 
party line, he refused to take a commission, but advanced rapidly from 
anti-aircraft gunner to gunnery sergeant major instructor and regimental 
sergeant major, engaged in political work wherever he went - especially, 
from 1943 to 1946, in India.

India - where he met Nehru and leaders of the Muslim League and his 
friendship with Indian communist students in Britain, all from 
establishment families, opened most anti-imperial doors - reinforced his 
own firm, but no longer uncritical, convictions. (Unlike him, Constance 
had never accepted the Moscow-imposed party line of 1939-41, which 
followed the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact). The cold war, particularly frozen 
during the years of Korea and McCarthyism, made it easier to maintain them.

He soon became a pillar of that remarkable assembly of talents, the 
Communist Party Historians' Group ("intellectually my lifeline"), and 
also of the Hull Communist party and its associated organisations, while 
building a double expertise in 19th-century British economic history and 
labour history.

Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin in 1956, or, more exactly, the 
failure of the British CP leadership to recognise its significance, 
transformed the Historians' Group from loyalists into vocal critics. 
Saville's was the first voice raised at its meetings. Soon, in 
partnership with another Yorkshire Communist historian, EP Thompson, he 
launched an opposition journal, the New Reasoner. Both were suspended by 
the CP and soon resigned from it with their supporters under the impact 
of the Hungarian rising of that year.

Saville remained a Marxist and, like most of the ex-Communist 
historians, firmly on the left; indeed, decidedly "old left" rather than 
"new left", let alone New Labour. The Society for the Study of Labour 
History, which he helped to found in 1958, inspired his most influential 
work: Essays in Labour History and the Dictionary of Labour Biography. 
This latter, remarkable, work, the best of its kind anywhere in the 
world, will almost certainly remain as his most lasting monument. He was 
also a force in the new Oral History Society, of which he became the 
first chairman in 1973, and in the library and publications department 
of Hull University, not to mention the economic and social history 
committee of what was then the Social Science Research Council.

 From 1964, most of his political writing was to be published in the 
Socialist Register, an annual volume he co-edited for some decades with 
Ralph Miliband. In the early 1970s he co-founded, later chaired, and, as 
usual, did most of the work for, the Council for Academic Freedom, in 
defence of the civil liberties of (British) academics. To the end, he 
remained proud of the speakers' classes he ran for six to eight weeks 
every summer for many years in Hull for trade unionists. He published a 
book of memoirs, Memoirs from the Left, in 2003.

Lucid, fiercely loyal to friends and causes, and a formidable enemy of 
bullshit, Saville made his contribution to history and to scholarship 
outside the limelight. "There are not many entries in the Dictionary of 
Labour Biography," Miliband wrote in the introduction for the 
Festschrift (Ideology and the Labour Movement, 1979) presented to him by 
friends and pupils, "which record lives of greater dedication and 
integrity."

Constance died in 2007. He is survived by their three sons and a daughter.

• John Saville (John Stamatopoulos), economic and social historian, born 
2 April 1916; died 13 June 2009




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