This is a fun, thorough, “people’s history” of Palo Alto, and as Malcolm Harris argues, the history of Palo Alto is the history of capitalism in the United States. Harris’s narrative is a counter-history; rather than recounting the story Silicon Valley prefers to tell about itself — geniuses working out of their garages to found the companies that will bring about the information age and/or save democracy, for example — he emphasizes labour relations, privatization of the commons, exploitation of legal grey zones, and (neo-)colonial relationships. Harris draws out many historical patterns that continue to play out in our present era: Palo Alto’s long history of union-busting presaged the labour regulation evasion of start-ups like Uber; the eugenics program of Stanford University’s founder shows an ideological continuity with Elon Musk’s technocratic right-wing beliefs; the close ties between industrial capitalists and the US government forged by President Hoover find their echoes in the revolving doors between the US White House and Silicon Valley tech giant.
It’s an approachable book, packed with interesting historical details, and condenses an impressive variety of secondary historical sources into a quickly-paced narrative. It would make a great entry-point into contemporary criticism of capitalism.
Because of these characteristics, I found myself comparing it to Tyler Shipley’s Canada In The World: Settler Capitalism and the Colonial Imagination, which I think serves as a fantastic introductory read for Canadian lefties. Shipley revisits Canadian history, understanding it to be driven by the demands of capitalism and settler colonialism, with even its foreign policy today being shaped by this core ideology. Though not short (452 pages), it is tightly written — that so much of Canada’s counter-history can be told without meandering too far from the topic of settler capitalism is a testament to the parsimony of his thesis.
Palo Alto performs more of a bait-and-switch: ostensibly about the history of a relatively tiny patch of the United States, it is actually about American settler capitalism. Harris colours quite a bit outside the lines of the municipality of Palo Alto. Conveniently for Harris, President Hoover was a Stanford graduate, providing a tangential excuse for covering the US state response to the Great Depression. In a further afield digression, Harris explains the different paths to economic liberalization pursued by the USSR and China — the connection is that Silicon Valley companies set up manufacturing operations in China during this period, you see. Perhaps because Harris can connect nearly every historical beat a beginner leftist ought to know to Palo Alto somehow, the book crams in a lot, and I think Harris’s argument gets a little lost in all the details. A more discerning selection of anecdotes could have trimmed the book down from a rather bulky 720 pages and allowed the major historical patterns to shine through more brightly.
While Canada In The World is a pop history, Tyler Shipley is an academic; the book’s tone is conversational but precise, opinionated but not over-dramatized. Harris is a journalist, and his writing style is more melodramatic, more podcasty, more cute. While not quite my taste, perhaps Harris’s book will pique readers’ curiosity to learn more, which I welcome.