The Origin of Capitalism

A Longer View

Paperback, 213 pages

English language

Published July 8, 2002 by Verso.

ISBN:
978-1-85984-392-5
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OCLC Number:
49834210

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(14 reviews)

4 editions

A lively, readable historic myth-buster

A great book, recommended if the subject of whether or not capitalism is somehow natural or inevitable interests you. It grounds that question in history while being written in approachable everyday language that presumes no specialized knowledge — not an academic tome. I learned so much and agree with the blurb by Adrienne Rich on the back: "The writing is so supple and accessible, and the argument so persuasive, it's like watching a cloudy mixture of ideas being turned into a clear solution."

To summarize: there's a pervasive notion that capitalism is inevitable as a result of drives built into human nature. This is SO pervasive in fact that even capitalism's biggest critics — committed Marxists — have often assumed it, writing histories in which capitalism naturally resulted once international trade reached a certain level, or once barriers that were holding capitalism back (feudal privilege, etc) were removed. Ellen Meiksins …

Review of 'The Origin of Capitalism' on 'Goodreads'

I didn't finish the book but I'm giving up on it. An interesting premise that started strong, but it seems all the author does is talk about the deficiencies in current explanations of the origins of capitalism, without much context to go on, and with little to say in the alternative as far as I can tell. Really disappointing.

Review of 'The Origin of Capitalism' on 'Goodreads'

Among the best historical works I've read. A compelling rebuttal to both the idea that capitalism was a natural step in the progression of history and the idea that capitalism arose from an intensified commercialism. Easy to follow along (at least for someone with Marxist jargon down). Especially found the section lengths to be perfect: not too long where it feels like a real time investment if I want to be able to stop at the end of a section/chapter, but not too short where it feels meaningless to even have section headings.

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Subjects

  • Capitalist or free market economies
  • Politics / Current Events
  • Economics - Theory
  • Business & Economics
  • Business/Economics
  • General
  • Economic History