Race, Nation, and Capital in the Modern World is a comprehensive yet concise book that traces the history of racism, nationalism and capitalism from their combined origins at the end of the fifteenth century to the present.
This book describes the development of legal codes and institutional practices that brought vast wealth and power to their chief beneficiaries, along with great suffering, exploitation and destruction to its victims. Instead of understanding racism as an aberration or dark flaw in the troubled past of a world power like the United States, this synthesis places race and racism in the forefront of the unfolding history of nationalism and capitalism. The work de-emphasizes the uniqueness of each nation’s particular experience by showing the interdependence of capitalist and racist practices. The narrative follows the leading hegemonic national powers as they expanded from mercantile conquests through plantation enslavement, massive displacement of populations, colonialism, global warfare and finally the tenacious contemporary aftermath. There are no comparable surveys for undergraduates or general readers seeking a unified historical understanding of these primary drivers of modernity. It is a provocative introductory guide and not a work of political theory.
This volume will appeal to students, scholars and those interested in studies on racism, race, capital, the history of inequality and human and civil rights.
Author(s): Philip Yale Nicholson
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 195
City: London
Cover
Endorsements
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Taking Shape: Race, State and Capital to 1600
2 Mercantile Capital, Racialized Agriculture: 1600–1713
3 Liberty, Law and Capital in the Peak Years of Slavery: 1713–1865
4 The Pressure Cooker of Race, Nation and Capital: 1865–1914
5 Furies Unleashed: 1914–1945
6 Cold War Double Standards: 1945-1991
7 Enduring Inequalities: 1991–2020s
Bibliography
Index