Less is More
Jason Hickel — a complete revision guide
What to expect
In your oral exam you draw three cards and set some aside; each card is a chapter from this book. For
the chapter you keep, the examiner asks you to do four things:
• summarise the chapter
• explain its difficult vocabulary
• describe the author's vision
• give your own opinion
How to use this guide
Part 1 — Mini cards: a tight spoken summary per chapter (your "if you say this, you're good"
version).
Part 2 — Full summaries: the deeper version of each chapter, plus the author's vision and quotable
lines.
Part 3 — Glossary: every important term, clearly explained — your glossary-question ammunition.
Covers chapters 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 (not 4). Learn the thread, not the exact words — and practise each summary
out loud.
, PART 1 · MINI CARDS — QUICK SPOKEN SUMMARIES
Each card is a ~45–60 second summary. Lead with the core claim, give a few supporting points (the bold words are
the terms to use), and land on the takeaway.
Chapter 1 — Capitalism: A Creation Story
This chapter argues that the ecological crisis is not caused by humanity in general but by capitalism — which is
why Hickel prefers the term Capitalocene over Anthropocene. His main point is that capitalism was not natural
or inevitable: after the Black Death, ordinary people in Europe actually had a good life, so the elite seized back
control through enclosure — fencing off the commons and forcing people off the land. This created artificial
scarcity, which pushed people into wage labour, while colonisation did exactly the same thing abroad. So
capitalism was imposed through organised violence — and because it was imposed, it can also be changed.
Core takeaway: Capitalism is a violent historical creation, not a law of nature.
Chapter 2 — Rise of the Juggernaut
This chapter explains why capitalism is obsessed with growth. Hickel distinguishes a use-value economy, where
you produce things because they're useful, from an exchange-value economy, where you produce only to
make profit that you reinvest for even more profit — the formula M → C → M'. The problem is that this system
can't stand still: investors always want more than last year, so the rule is grow or die. After World War II this
logic became official state policy through GDP and neoliberalism, turning growth into a kind of religion Hickel
calls growthism.
Core takeaway: Capitalism is structurally forced to grow endlessly — it isn't a choice.
Chapter 3 — Will Technology Save Us?
Here Hickel answers the obvious objection: won't technology and green growth save us? His answer is no. The
Paris Agreement only works on paper because it secretly relies on BECCS, a speculative technology that would
need tree plantations two to three times the size of India. The deeper problem is that you simply can't
decouple economic growth from environmental damage fast enough — more growth always means more
energy demand. So to cut emissions in time, we have to reduce total energy use, which means slowing growth
itself.
Core takeaway: Technology won't let us keep growing — green growth is a myth.
Chapter 5 — Pathways to a Post-Capitalist World
This is the solutions chapter, and the key word is degrowth — which Hickel stresses is not a recession, but a
planned, fair scaling-down of resource and energy use in rich countries. He gives concrete steps: end planned
obsolescence, cut advertising, shift from ownership to usership (like tool libraries), end food waste, and scale
down destructive industries like beef. Because we'd produce less, he also proposes a shorter working week
and a job guarantee, and — crucially — redistributing income so this doesn't become austerity. His hopeful
point is that working and consuming less actually makes people happier and healthier.
Core takeaway: Degrowth is a deliberate, fairer economy designed not to need growth.
LESS IS MORE · Jason Hickel · exam revision guide p. 2