Year 501: The Conquest Continues, by Noam Chomsky, first published in 1993, outlines a history of the world from 1492 to 1992 as a response to celebrations of the Columbus Quincentenary. Chomsky describes the book as "concerned with central themes of the 500-year European conquest of the world that was commemorated on October 12, 1992 the forms they are likely to assume in the coming years."[1]
Chomsky referenced the forthcoming book in a September 1992 article[2] and gave the fourth Raymond Williams Memorial Lecture lecture in London in November 1992 on the topic "Year 501".[3] First published in English (1993),[4] translated into Spanish (1993),[5] German (1993),[6] Portuguese (1993),[7] Greek (1994),[8] Italian (1994),[9] French (1995),[10] Arabic (1996),[11] Serbian (1998),[12] Polish (1999),[13] Korean (2000).[14] A new edition with a new preface was publish in English in 2015 by Haymarket Books and Pluto Press. The new edition was also published in French (2016) [15] and Turkish (2017).[16]
In a 1993 C-SPAN interview in response to a question as to why his recent books were difficult to find, including Year 501, Chomsky stated they are "not reviewed so its hard to know about them and they're usually printed by small presses which don't have the resources to advertise." He further explained why his books are hard to find was because "they say unpopular things. One book of mine happens to be on the US media it was a best-seller in Canada...It was based on lectures given over Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. I don't think it had a single review in the United States. Why should the American media want to publicize a critical analysis of the American media."[26]
David Armitage writes in the International Journal of Cultural Property that "many of Chomsky's arguments become as monocausal and hence undeniable as the ideological strains which he is attacking" and that the book "ultimately fails as a polemic because it presents no conception of how a neo-liberal world order might be overturned, how the benefits of a global economy might be maximised for the good of all, nor how an imperial self-interest seemingly as old as political communities themselves could ever be abandoned."[19]
Howard Zinn writes that "Year 501 is another awesome achievement by Noam Chomsky. It is a devastating array of information about the U.S. role in the world, placed in the long historical perspective of the 500 years that followed the voyages of Columbus. The result is a wonderful single-volume education in history and world politics."[27]
Contents
PART I: Old Wine, New Bottles
The Savage Injustice of the Europeans
Felling Trees and Indians
Showers of Benevolence
Chapter 2: The Contours of World Order
The Logic of North-South Relations
After Colonialism
The Rich Men's Club
The End of the Affluent Alliance
The "Vile Maxim of the Masters"
The New Imperial Age
Chapter 3: North-South/East-West
An Oversize "Rotten Apple"
Logical Illogicality
Return to Normalcy
Some Free Market Successes
After the Cold War
The Soft Line
PART II: High Principles
Chapter 4: Democracy and the Market
The Freedom that Counts
The Flight of the Bumble Bee
The Good News
Reshaping Industrial Policy
Chapter 5: Human Rights: The Pragmatic Criterion
Reality and its Abuse
Securing the Anchor
Celebration
Closing the Books
PART III: Persistent Themes
Chapter 6: A "Ripe Fruit"
Chapter 7: World Orders Old and New: Latin America
"The Colossus of the South"
"The Welfare of the World Capitalist System"
Protecting Democracy
Securing the Victory
"A Real American Success Story"
Fundamentalism Triumphant
Some Competitors for the Prize
"Our Nature and Traditions"
Some Tools of the Trade
Chapter 8: The Tragedy of Haiti
"The First Free Nation of Free Men"
"Unselfish Intervention"
"Politics, not Principle"
Chapter 9: The Burden of Responsibility
Irrational Disdain
Laboratory Animals
Indian Removal and the Vile Maxim
"The American Psyche"
PART IV: Memories
Chapter 10: Murdering History
Murdering History
The Date which will Live in Infamy
Missing Pieces
Some Lessons in Political Correctness
"Self-Pity" and other Character Flaws
On Sensitivity to History
"Thief! Thief!"
A Date which does not Live in Infamy
Chapter 11: The Third World at Home
The Paradox of '92
Fight to the Death
To Consult Our Neighbor
References
^ abChomsky, Noam (2001). Rethinking Camelot: JFK, the Vietnam War, and U.S. political culture (3. Dr. ed.). Boston, Mass: South End Press. p. 1. ISBN978-0-89608-458-2.
^Chomsky, Noam; Haupt, Michael; Chomsky, Noam (1993). Wirtschaft und Gewalt: vom Kolonialismus zur Neuen Weltordnung (1. Aufl ed.). Lüneburg: zu Klampen. ISBN978-3-924245-31-3.
^Chomsky, Noam (1993). Ano 501 (in Brazilian Portuguese). Pagina Aberta. ISBN978-85-85328-54-2.
^Chomsky, Noam (2002). Anno 501 la conquista continua. L'epopea dell'imperialismo dal genocidio coloniale ai nostri giorni (in Italian) (1st ed.). Roma: Gamberetti. ISBN978-88-7990-004-1.
^Chomsky, Noam; Labarre, Christian (1995). L'an 501: la conquête continue. Montréal Bruxelles: Ed. Ecosociété Ed. EPO. ISBN978-2-921561-19-8.
^Chomsky, Noam (1 January 1996). سنة 501 الغزو مستمر (in Arabic). دار المدى للثقافة والنشر.
^Chomsky, Noam (1998). Godina 501 (in Serbian) (1st ed.). Novi Sad: Svetovi. ISBN978-86-7047-198-6.
^촘스키, 노암 (2000). 507년 정복은 계속된다 (in Korean). 이후 (published March 2000). ISBN9788988105139.
^Chomsky, Noam (2016). L'an 501 (in French). Translated by Labarre, Christian. Ecosociete Eds. ISBN978-2-89719-266-2.
^Chomsky, Noam (2017). Yıl 501-Fetih Devam Ediyor [Year 501: The Conquest Continues] (in Turkish). Translated by Gülmen, Mengü. İthaki Yayınları. ISBN9786053756996.