Capitalism
A Global History
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- 14,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
A brilliant global narrative that unravels the defining story of the past thousand years
'Capitalism is a learned, formidable and vivid story... Beckert has now proved once and for all the necessity of naming the global beast in order to reveal its vast power, past and present' - Marcus Rediker, The New York Times
'Magisterial in scope and ambition, Sven Beckert’s Capitalism is a dazzling global history of the forces that have shaped – and continue to shape – our world. A true tour de force' - Peter Frankopan
No other phenomenon has shaped human history as decisively as capitalism. It structures how we live and work, how we think about ourselves and others, how we organise our politics. Sven Beckert situates the story of capitalism within the largest conceivable geographical and historical framework in this fascinating new book.
Capitalism, argues Beckert, was born global. Emerging from merchant communities across Asia, Africa and Europe, capitalism’s radical recasting of economic life rooted itself only gradually. Then it burst onto the world scene, as European states and merchants built a powerful alliance that would propel them across the oceans. This epic drama corresponded at no point to an idealised dream of free markets. All along, state-backed institutions and imperial expansions shaped its dynamics.
Capitalism decentres the European perspective, highlighting agency, resistance, innovation and ruthless coercion around the world through to the present with the rise of Asian economies, particularly China. Sven Beckert doesn’t merely add up capitalism’s debits and credits in this monumental book, but allows us to think afresh about the past to help us re-imagine the future.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this epic account, Bancroft Prize–winning historian Beckert (Empire of Cotton) charts the rise of the modern global economic order. Capitalism's emergence represents "a fundamental break in human history," he writes, one that "turned human relations upside down" and "made revolution a permanent feature of economic life." He also argues that "capitalism was born global"—emerging as it did from international trade, "it was always a world economy." Beckert's global perspective emphasizes the "astounding amount of coercion and violence" employed by the "capitalist revolution" in order to overcome "the enormous resistance from both elites and commoners" around the world. Beckert begins his story in modern-day Yemen in the year 1150, when "a new kind of trader rose to prominence" who "stayed put and traded at a distance." From there, he traces capitalism's development through paper money, slavery, and the Industrial Revolution. By the mid-19th century, he argues, capitalism had forced a "global reconstruction" that led to a subsequent century of rebellions and massive warfare. Even during the relatively peaceful post-WWII period of decolonization, "an international order" was constructed to promote capitalism's "mobility" over the rights of newly independent nations. Today, markets continue to expand into new spaces of human life, as "our very attention has become a commodity." Ultimately, Beckert furnishes ample evidence that "no imperial or totalitarian project has ever come close to capitalism's success." An unparalleled work of scholarship that is also a joy to read, this is a monumental achievement.