- Amazon Business: Make the most of your Amazon Business account with exclusive tools and savings. Login now
- Amazon Business : For business-only pricing, quantity discounts and FREE Shipping. Register a free business account
Other Sellers on Amazon
+ $3.99 shipping
+ $3.99 shipping
Follow the Author
OK
The Five Stages of Collapse: Survivors' Toolkit Paperback – Illustrated, June 1, 2013
|
Dmitry Orlov
(Author)
Find all the books, read about the author, and more.
See search results for this author
Are you an author?
Learn about Author Central
|
Enhance your purchase
-
Print length288 pages
-
LanguageEnglish
-
PublisherNew Society Publishers
-
Publication dateJune 1, 2013
-
Reading age16 years and up
-
Dimensions6 x 0.48 x 9 inches
-
ISBN-100865717362
-
ISBN-13978-0865717367
The Amazon Book Review
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
-
Apple
-
Android
-
Windows Phone
-
Android
|
Download to your computer
|
Kindle Cloud Reader
|
Frequently bought together
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
The Collapse of Complex Societies (New Studies in Archaeology)PaperbackIn Stock.
Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Experience and American Prospects-Revised & UpdatedPaperbackIn Stock.
Shrinking the Technosphere: Getting a Grip on Technologies that Limit our Autonomy, Self-Sufficiency and FreedomPaperbackIn Stock.
Everything is Going According to PlanPaperbackIn Stock.
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed: Revised EditionPaperbackIn Stock.
The Meat GenerationDmitry OrlovPaperbackIn Stock.
Customers who bought this item also bought
Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Experience and American Prospects-Revised & UpdatedPaperbackIn Stock.
The Collapse of Complex Societies (New Studies in Archaeology)PaperbackIn Stock.
Shrinking the Technosphere: Getting a Grip on Technologies that Limit our Autonomy, Self-Sufficiency and FreedomPaperbackIn Stock.
Everything is Going According to PlanPaperbackIn Stock.
The Meat GenerationDmitry OrlovPaperbackIn Stock.
Living in the Long Emergency: Global Crisis, the Failure of the Futurists, and the Early Adapters Who Are Showing Us the Way ForwardHardcoverIn Stock.
Special offers and product promotions
Editorial Reviews
Review
Five Stages of Collapse is a highly entertaining and enlightening examination of the entrails of what happens when societies are driven into the abyss by greedy, hard-hearted elites and corrupt and incompetent politicians.
And if Orlov turns out to be correct, this book just might end up saving your life by revealing steps you can take to prepare for the worst. Review, Carolyn Baker, Speaking Truth to Power April 7,2013 I am a huge fan of Dmitry's work, and I must concur with Richard Heinberg who says, "Even if I believed collapse were impossible I'd still read everything Dmitry Orlov writes: he's that entertaining." Incisive articulation of reality tempered with irrepressible humor and sarcasm define his writing style and not only compel us to stay with what some describe as a "dark Russian perspective," but reveal a man who has found a way to live with what is so and navigate it with buoyant humanity. The Five Stages of Collapse is nothing less than a definitive textbook for a hypothetical course entitled "The Collapse Of Industrial Civilization 101" or perhaps a bible of sorts for an imaginary "Institute of Collapse Studies." While to my knowledge no such courses or organizations presently exist, this book would be an essential aspect of any such entity's credibility. Review, Michael C. Ruppert, April 18, 2013 The writing of this book was a rotten job, but it was absolutely necessary. If someone had to do it, I am very glad that it was Dmitry Orlov. Without his wit, alacrity and experience, the task of beating the horse of the Cartesian approach to understanding our dying world to death would have resulted in something unbearably maddening, dry and uninspiring. In this book he sneaks some LOLROF side-splitters in when you least expect them. One gathers from Orlov's painstaking efforts, the futility of looking to outdated constructs and philosophies for understanding and relief from a crisis that demands complete innovation and inspiration. Reading closely, one sees Orlov carefully planting seeds of reconciliation with our planet and each other throughout--as a fundamental baseline. He arrives at places outside the box of the current meme by using methodologies and analyses that are sacramental within the meme. That's an achievement. Perhaps in his next book he will stand on that ground more forcefully and tell us what he sees. We don't need to understand collapse right now as much as we need to survive it. And that is where Dmitry Orlov rises through the rubble and gives us magnificent gems like this: "At the rock bottom of human survival, there is no individual and there is no state; there is only the family, or, if there isn't, there is something that's not quite human--or there is nothing at all." Profound insight combined with wry humor is such an incendiary weapon I am tempted to call The Five Stages of Collapse an "Orlov Cocktail." His delivery of hard truths laced with irony saturates us in seldom reported but extremely relevant facts about the world. He is one of the best writers on the scene today, working at the top of his game. There is more to enjoy in this book with every page you turn, and in very uncertain times, Orlov's advice is, at its core, kind-spirited and extraordinarily helpful.
---Albert Bates, author, The Biochar Solution Even if I believed collapse were impossible I'd still read everything Dmitry Orlov writes: he's that entertaining. Unfortunately, however, collapse of some sort or other, of some degree or another, is almost guaranteed. Orlov does us all a great service by teasing apart the kinds and degrees of collapse so that we can prepare for what is likely and "dig in our heels" to prevent what is unsurvivable.
---Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute, Author, The End of Growth
Review, Charlie Smith, Straight.com July 1, 2013
Five Stages of Collapse is a highly entertaining and enlightening examination of the entrails of what happens when societies are driven into the abyss by greedy, hard-hearted elites and corrupt and incompetent politicians.
And if Orlov turns out to be correct, this book just might end up saving your life by revealing steps you can take to prepare for the worst. Review, Carolyn Baker, Speaking Truth to Power April 7,2013 I am a huge fan of Dmitry's work, and I must concur with Richard Heinberg who says, "Even if I believed collapse were impossible I'd still read everything Dmitry Orlov writes: he's that entertaining." Incisive articulation of reality tempered with irrepressible humor and sarcasm define his writing style and not only compel us to stay with what some describe as a "dark Russian perspective," but reveal a man who has found a way to live with what is so and navigate it with buoyant humanity. The Five Stages of Collapse is nothing less than a definitive textbook for a hypothetical course entitled "The Collapse Of Industrial Civilization 101" or perhaps a bible of sorts for an imaginary "Institute of Collapse Studies." While to my knowledge no such courses or organizations presently exist, this book would be an essential aspect of any such entity's credibility. Review, Michael C. Ruppert, April 18, 2013 The writing of this book was a rotten job, but it was absolutely necessary. If someone had to do it, I am very glad that it was Dmitry Orlov. Without his wit, alacrity and experience, the task of beating the horse of the Cartesian approach to understanding our dying world to death would have resulted in something unbearably maddening, dry and uninspiring. In this book he sneaks some LOLROF side-splitters in when you least expect them. One gathers from Orlov's painstaking efforts, the futility of looking to outdated constructs and philosophies for understanding and relief from a crisis that demands complete innovation and inspiration. Reading closely, one sees Orlov carefully planting seeds of reconciliation with our planet and each other throughout--as a fundamental baseline. He arrives at places outside the box of the current meme by using methodologies and analyses that are sacramental within the meme. That's an achievement. Perhaps in his next book he will stand on that ground more forcefully and tell us what he sees. We don't need to understand collapse right now as much as we need to survive it. And that is where Dmitry Orlov rises through the rubble and gives us magnificent gems like this: "At the rock bottom of human survival, there is no individual and there is no state; there is only the family, or, if there isn't, there is something that's not quite human--or there is nothing at all." Profound insight combined with wry humor is such an incendiary weapon I am tempted to call The Five Stages of Collapse an "Orlov Cocktail." His delivery of hard truths laced with irony saturates us in seldom reported but extremely relevant facts about the world. He is one of the best writers on the scene today, working at the top of his game. There is more to enjoy in this book with every page you turn, and in very uncertain times, Orlov's advice is, at its core, kind-spirited and extraordinarily helpful.
---Albert Bates, author, The Biochar Solution Even if I believed collapse were impossible I'd still read everything Dmitry Orlov writes: he's that entertaining. Unfortunately, however, collapse of some sort or other, of some degree or another, is almost guaranteed. Orlov does us all a great service by teasing apart the kinds and degrees of collapse so that we can prepare for what is likely and "dig in our heels" to prevent what is unsurvivable.
---Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute, Author, The End of Growth
Review
"Profound insight combined with wry humor is such an incendiary weapon I am tempted to call The Five Stages of Collapse an "Orlov Cocktail". His delivery of hard truths laced with irony saturates us in seldom reported but extremely relevant facts about the world. He is one of the best writers on the scene today, working at the top of his game. There is more to enjoy in this book with every page you turn, and in very uncertain times, Orlov’s advice is, at its core, kind-spirited and extraordinarily helpful."
― Albert Bates, author, The Biochar Solution
"Even if I believed collapse were impossible I’d still read everything Dmitry Orlov writes: he’s that entertaining. Unfortunately, however, collapse of some sort or other, of some degree or another, is almost guaranteed. Orlov does us all a great service by teasing apart the kinds and degrees of collapse so that we can prepare for what is likely and "dig in our heels" to prevent what is unsurvivable."
― Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute, author, The End of Growth
"At a time when most talk about the prospect of collapse tends to wander off into vague generalities, Orlov’s latest book offers a welcome dose of clear thinking. Compulsively readable, firmly grounded in real-world examples, and laced with his usual mordant wit, The Five Stages of Collapse deserves space on the bookshelf of anyone concerned about the future of industrial civilization."
― John Michael Greer, author, Green Wizardry
Book Description
A user’s guide to economic, political, social and cultural collapse.
From the Back Cover
A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Financial, Commercial,Political, Social and Cultural Collapse
...one of the best writers on the scene today, working at the top of his game. There is more to enjoy in this book with every page you turn, and in very uncertain times, Orlov’s advice is, at its core, kind-spirited and extraordinarily helpful. Albert Bates, author, The Biochar Solution
When thinking about political paralysis, looming resource shortages and a rapidly changing climate, many of us can do no better than imagine a future that is just less of the same. But it is during such periods of profound disruption that sweeping cultural change becomes inevitable. In The Five Stages of Collapse , Dmitry Orlov posits a taxonomy of collapse, suggesting that if the first three stages (financial, commercial and political) are met with the appropriate personal and social transformations, then the worst consequences of social and cultural collapse can be avoided.
Drawing on a detailed examination of both pre- and post-collapse societies, The Five Stages of Collapse provides a unique perspective on the typical characteristics of highly resilient communities. Both successful and unsuccessful adaptations are explored in the areas of finance, commerce, self-governance, social organization and culture. Case studies provide a wealth of specifics for each stage of collapse, focusing on the Icelanders, the Russian Mafia, the Pashtuns of Central Asia, the Roma of nowhere in particular and the Ik of East Africa.
The Five Stages of Collapse provides a wealth of practical information and a long list of to-do items for those who wish to survive each stage with their health, sanity, friendships, family relationships and sense of humor intact. Shot through with Orlov’s trademark dark humor, this is an invaluable toolkit for crafting workable post-collapse solutions at the scale of the family and the community.
...Orlov does us all a great service by teasing apart the kinds and degrees of collapse so that we can prepare for what is likely and "dig in our heels" to prevent what is unsurvivable. Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute, author, The End of Growth
Dmitry Orlov was born in Leningrad and immigrated to the United States in the 1970’s. He is the author of Reinventing Collapse, Hold Your Applause! and Absolutely Positive, and publishes weekly at the phenomenally popular blog ClubOrlov.com.
About the Author
Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.
Product details
- Publisher : New Society Publishers; Illustrated edition (June 1, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0865717362
- ISBN-13 : 978-0865717367
- Reading age : 16 years and up
- Item Weight : 14.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.48 x 9 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#336,912 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #139 in Canadian Politics
- #208 in Sustainable Business Development
- #715 in Environmental Economics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Mr. Orlov’s Five Stages are especially germane to the status of collapse in our present global industrial civilization. While they likely have applicability to the general collapse of historical empires and civilizations, the current paradigm of an economy that requires limitless growth and does not recognize a finite world is given to being understood by the Five Stages. As Mr. Orlov says:
"The difference is that this collapse will be on a completely unprecedented scale, and global in scope."
Larger discussions of historical collapse (also a very relevant study) can be found in Joseph Tainter’s The Collapse of Complex Societies and Jared Diamond’s Collapse.
The five numbered chapters in this book are expositions on the five collapse stages. These are: Financial, Commercial, Political, Social, and Cultural. Mr. Orlov begins by expressing each as a breach of a particular trust or faith that exists (and taken for granted) between society’s organizing structures and the common people. He then goes into essays on aspects of the organizing structure for that category, its origin and evolution, what collapse for it will look like, and how people might cope with its loss. He concludes each collapse stage chapter with a case study that illustrates his points.
I’ve read much of Mr. Orlov’s work in this area over the years and I found this book enlightening in the greater depth of discussion for each collapse stage. I especially liked the parts about the history and use of money, the importance of the family unit to cultures that endure, and the discussion of anarchy. I thought the case studies were well-selected and illuminated understanding of the associated collapse stage. These included how Iceland recovered from the 2008 financial downfall, how the Pashtuns have resisted empire, and how the African Ik tribe illustrates how collapse can lead to a frightening loss of humanity.
The Ik case study is especially disturbing and is taken from Colin Turnbull’s book, The Mountain People, which is probably a worthwhile, though dark, read.
What I like about this book is its exposition on a subject that needs much greater awareness among the world’s population. Mr. Orlov goes further in-depth here than in his other writings and presentations of the subject. He isn’t necessarily concise, however, and some of his supporting essays cross the line into rambling (or at least, more detail than is required and that’s why I withheld a fifth star in my rating). The part on language in the Political Collapse chapter is one such section. Mr. Orlov is a linguistics scholar, but he gave more information than needed here, in my opinion.
While I generally enjoy Mr. Orlov’s prose and how he offers compelling explanations of involved concepts with a touch of humor, sometimes he’ll make blanket statements for shock value. For instance, he says:
"Charity is really a sort of imposed hypocrisy— a system of domination in which those who have the upper hand pretend to offer help in the most humiliating way possible."
I suspect there’s truth to this, but I would have to allow that charity surely exists, here and there, in a more honest form.
He also gets a bit more into criticism of religious belief and extolling atheism. Now he avers that religious/spiritual faith can be good glue for holding communities together and even resisting empire, but he is clear in saying its a useful delusion. He is certainly entitled to that opinion but some readers might be put off by it. Still, I consider this a minor criticism to an overall valuable work.
Generally, Mr. Orlov’s insights are keen and well-founded. I can agree that usury is a form of extortion and that modern finance is mostly mathematical obfuscation. And he notes two or three time, rightly I think, that
"… the free market is completely reliant on a system of property law, a legal system that is able to enforce contracts and a law enforcement system that can deter economic crime."
While this book is an important one, be aware that the “survivor’s toolkit” part is not explicit. That is, you can deduce a toolkit from the information presented but it is not listed in an appendix or such. You won’t get a checklist here of things to do to prepare for collapse. You will, however, gather some valuable clues as to how the world truly operates and where it’s headed.
About 80 percent of the book seemed reasonable and acceptable. The other 20% was, in no particular order: statements that were obviously factually incorrect, assertions based on faulty logic, assertions based on no logic, assumptions based on Freudianism (will that never die???), and conclusions based on “facts” for which no support was given. Unfortunately, this 20% really makes you wonder how reasonable and acceptable the other 80% really is. The absence of a serious bibliography adds to this concern.
In short, this book is basically one guy’s (more or less well-written) rant about what’s wrong with society today and how everything is about to fall apart. It’s basically like being stuck on a plane for 10 hours next to someone who is obviously intelligent but also obviously slightly unhinged and who has spent way too much time inside his own head. This book isn’t worth spending any money on, in my opinion. You can find the same sort of stuff, free, on the internet, without trying too hard.
In the present book, he steps back from the specifics of the collapse of overextended superpowers to examine the process of collapse as it has played out in a multitude of human societies since the beginning of civilisation. The author argues that collapse occurs in five stages, with each stage creating the preconditions for the next.
1. Financial collapse. Faith in “business as usual” is lost. The future is no longer assumed to resemble the past in any way that allows risk to be assessed and financial assets to be guaranteed. Financial institutions become insolvent; savings are wiped out and access to capital is lost.
2. Commercial collapse. Faith that “the market shall provide” is lost. Money is devalued and/or becomes scarce, commodities are hoarded, import and retail chains break down and widespread shortages of survival necessities become the norm.
3. Political collapse. Faith that “the government will take care of you” is lost. As official attempts to mitigate widespread loss of access to commercial sources of survival necessities fail to make a difference, the political establishment loses legitimacy and relevance.
4. Social collapse. Faith that “your people will take care of you” is lost, as social institutions, be they charities or other groups that rush in to fill the power vacuum, run out of resources or fail through internal conflict.
5. Cultural collapse. Faith in the goodness of humanity is lost. People lose their capacity for “kindness, generosity, consideration, affection, honesty, hospitality, compassion, charity.” Families disband and compete as individuals for scarce resources, The new motto becomes “May you die today so that I can die tomorrow.”
Orlov argues that our current globalised society is the product of innovations at variance with ancestral human society which are not sustainable: in particular the exponentially growing consumption of a finite source of energy from fossil fuels and an economy based upon exponentially growing levels of debt: government, corporate, and individual. Exponential growth with finite resources cannot go on forever, and what cannot go on forever is certain to eventually end. He argues that we are already seeing the first symptoms of the end of the order which began with the industrial revolution.
While each stage of collapse sows the seeds of the next, the progression is not inevitable. In post-Soviet Russia, for example, the collapse progressed into stage 3 (political collapse), but was then arrested by the re-assertion of government authority. While the Putin regime may have many bad aspects, it may produce better outcomes for the Russian people than progression into a stage 4 or 5 collapse.
In each stage of collapse, there are societies and cultures which are resilient against the collapse around them and ride it out. In some cases, it's because they have survived many collapses before and have evolved not to buy into the fragile institutions which are tumbling down and in others it's older human forms of organisation re-asserting themselves as newfangled innovations founder. The author cites these collapse survivors:
1. Financial collapse: Iceland
2. Commercial collapse: The Russian Mafia
3. Political collapse: The Pashtun
4. Social collapse: The Roma
5. Cultural collapse: The Ik
This is a simultaneously enlightening and infuriating book. While the author has deep insights into how fragile our societies are and how older forms of society emerge after they collapse, I think he may make the error of assuming that we are living at the end of history and that regression to the mean is the only possible outcome. People at every stage of the development of society which brought us to the present point doubtless argued the same. “When we've cut down all the forests for firewood, what shall we do?” they said, before the discovery of coal. “When the coal seams are mined out, what will happen?” they said, before petroleum was discovered to be a resource, not a nuisance seeping from the ground. I agree with Orlov that our civilisation has been founded on abundant cheap energy and resources, but there are several orders of magnitude more energy and resources available for our taking in the solar system, and we already have the technology, if not the imagination and will, to employ them to enrich all of the people of Earth and beyond.
If collapse be our destiny, I believe our epitaph will read “Lack of imagination and courage”. Sadly, this may be the way to bet. Had we not turned inward in the 1970s and squandered our wealth on a futile military competition and petroleum, Earth would now be receiving most of its energy from solar power satellites and futurists would be projecting the date at which the population off-planet exceeded the mudboots deep down in the gravity well. Collapse is an option—let's hope we do not choose it.
Top reviews from other countries
In this excellent book, Orlov provides a step-by-step analysis of collapse. First, the financial system collapses once the underpinning assumption of perpetual growth becomes invalid. Financial collapse creates commercial collapse as trading relationships founder in the absence of finance. Stage three sees the collapse of the state as tax revenues disappear. And so on.
This book is very well-reasoned and well-written. I would have liked a few more stats (hence four stars instead of five), but otherwise it is wholly commendable.
Dmitry Orlov writes with a wonderful dry humour which is most engaging in itself. He develops the idea of various of our systems falling over - financial, commercial political, social and cultural, and then provides cases studies of each of these, which can provide some solutions to the issues raised. This is of course set against our various financial calamities, resource drawdown, slide into climate change, over population and the slow demise of the nation state. Of course this introduces ideas and possibilities that are very hard for many of us to process at first glance or even second glance but i would urge anyone and everyone to stop and think about what he has to say as each of his case studies are based on events which are happening now, and seemingly being extrapolated across the globe. he emphasises the psychological damage that can accompany these changes, which is why I particularly find his writing so useful, so that when the wheels come off I am emotionally prepared, and hopefully able to function as a useful parent and neighbour.
He offers hope too. Having spent the last few decades demolishing the extended family and locally based life we will perforce find that our most resilient social ties will be within our families and close communities. Our salvation such as it is will rest within that setting, and the symptoms of this are already apparent with for instance the growth in the 3 generation household.
Wonderful real world examples used from his personal experience and via case studies. I also find his writing style and way of presenting the topic to be very amusing. Difficult to do considering the topic.
Well worth the asking price.
It also explains how much we have lost getting here and how we might reclaim that all back. Which is why I read it twice. I missed the happy 'ending' the first time round.

