Charles Post
The American Road to Capitalism
Studies in Class-Structure, Economic Development and Political Conflict, 1620 1877
Charles Post
The American Road to Capitalism
Studies in Class-Structure, Economic Development and Political Conflict, 1620 1877
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Most historians assume that American capitalism was either imported or the result of market expansion. Post proves otherwise.
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Most historians assume that American capitalism was either imported or the result of market expansion. Post proves otherwise.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. April 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9781608461981
- ISBN-10: 160846198X
- Artikelnr.: 34390167
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. April 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9781608461981
- ISBN-10: 160846198X
- Artikelnr.: 34390167
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
CHARLES POST, Ph. D. (1983) in Sociology, SUNY-Binghamton, is Professor of Sociology at Borough of Manhattan Community College-CUNY. He has published in New Left Review, Journal of Peasant Studies, Journal of Agrarian Change , Against the Current and Historical Materialism.
Foreword by Ellen Meiksins Wood
Introduction
1. The American Road to Capitalism
i. Plantation-slavery
ii. Agrarian petty-commodity production
iii. Capitalist manufacture and industry
iv. Conclusion: the Civil War
2. The Agrarian Origins of US Capitalism: The Transformation of the
Northern Countryside before the Civil War
i. Rural class-structure in the North before the Civil War
ii. Debating the transformation of northern agriculture
iii. The transformation of the northern countryside, c. 1776-1861
3. Plantation-Slavery and Economic Development in the Antebellum Southern
United States
i. The 'planter-capitalism' model
ii. The 'non-bourgeois civilisation' model
iii. Class-structure and economic development in the antebellum-South
4. Agrarian Class-Structure and Economic Development in Colonial British
North America: The Place of the American Revolution in the Origins of US
Capitalism
i. The commercialisation-staples model
ii. The demographic-frontier model
iii. Agrarian social-property relations in colonial British North America
iv. Colonial economic development, the American Revolution, and the
development of capitalism in the US, 1776-1861
5. Social-Property Relations, Class-Conflict and the Origins of the US
Civil War: Toward a New Social Interpretation
i. Ashworth's social interpretation of the US Civil War
ii. A critique of slavery, capitalism and politics in the
antebellum-republic
iii. Toward a new social interpretation of the US Civil War
Conclusion: Democracy against Capitalism in the Post-Civil-War United
States
i. Democracy against capitalism in the North: radicalism, class-struggle
and the rise of liberal democracy, 1863-77
ii. Democracy against capitalism in the South: the rise and fall of
peasant-citizenship, 1865-77
iii. The defeat of populism, 'Jim Crow' and the establishment of capitalist
plantation-agriculture in the South, 1877-1900
References
Index
Introduction
1. The American Road to Capitalism
i. Plantation-slavery
ii. Agrarian petty-commodity production
iii. Capitalist manufacture and industry
iv. Conclusion: the Civil War
2. The Agrarian Origins of US Capitalism: The Transformation of the
Northern Countryside before the Civil War
i. Rural class-structure in the North before the Civil War
ii. Debating the transformation of northern agriculture
iii. The transformation of the northern countryside, c. 1776-1861
3. Plantation-Slavery and Economic Development in the Antebellum Southern
United States
i. The 'planter-capitalism' model
ii. The 'non-bourgeois civilisation' model
iii. Class-structure and economic development in the antebellum-South
4. Agrarian Class-Structure and Economic Development in Colonial British
North America: The Place of the American Revolution in the Origins of US
Capitalism
i. The commercialisation-staples model
ii. The demographic-frontier model
iii. Agrarian social-property relations in colonial British North America
iv. Colonial economic development, the American Revolution, and the
development of capitalism in the US, 1776-1861
5. Social-Property Relations, Class-Conflict and the Origins of the US
Civil War: Toward a New Social Interpretation
i. Ashworth's social interpretation of the US Civil War
ii. A critique of slavery, capitalism and politics in the
antebellum-republic
iii. Toward a new social interpretation of the US Civil War
Conclusion: Democracy against Capitalism in the Post-Civil-War United
States
i. Democracy against capitalism in the North: radicalism, class-struggle
and the rise of liberal democracy, 1863-77
ii. Democracy against capitalism in the South: the rise and fall of
peasant-citizenship, 1865-77
iii. The defeat of populism, 'Jim Crow' and the establishment of capitalist
plantation-agriculture in the South, 1877-1900
References
Index
Foreword by Ellen Meiksins Wood
Introduction
1. The American Road to Capitalism
i. Plantation-slavery
ii. Agrarian petty-commodity production
iii. Capitalist manufacture and industry
iv. Conclusion: the Civil War
2. The Agrarian Origins of US Capitalism: The Transformation of the
Northern Countryside before the Civil War
i. Rural class-structure in the North before the Civil War
ii. Debating the transformation of northern agriculture
iii. The transformation of the northern countryside, c. 1776-1861
3. Plantation-Slavery and Economic Development in the Antebellum Southern
United States
i. The 'planter-capitalism' model
ii. The 'non-bourgeois civilisation' model
iii. Class-structure and economic development in the antebellum-South
4. Agrarian Class-Structure and Economic Development in Colonial British
North America: The Place of the American Revolution in the Origins of US
Capitalism
i. The commercialisation-staples model
ii. The demographic-frontier model
iii. Agrarian social-property relations in colonial British North America
iv. Colonial economic development, the American Revolution, and the
development of capitalism in the US, 1776-1861
5. Social-Property Relations, Class-Conflict and the Origins of the US
Civil War: Toward a New Social Interpretation
i. Ashworth's social interpretation of the US Civil War
ii. A critique of slavery, capitalism and politics in the
antebellum-republic
iii. Toward a new social interpretation of the US Civil War
Conclusion: Democracy against Capitalism in the Post-Civil-War United
States
i. Democracy against capitalism in the North: radicalism, class-struggle
and the rise of liberal democracy, 1863-77
ii. Democracy against capitalism in the South: the rise and fall of
peasant-citizenship, 1865-77
iii. The defeat of populism, 'Jim Crow' and the establishment of capitalist
plantation-agriculture in the South, 1877-1900
References
Index
Introduction
1. The American Road to Capitalism
i. Plantation-slavery
ii. Agrarian petty-commodity production
iii. Capitalist manufacture and industry
iv. Conclusion: the Civil War
2. The Agrarian Origins of US Capitalism: The Transformation of the
Northern Countryside before the Civil War
i. Rural class-structure in the North before the Civil War
ii. Debating the transformation of northern agriculture
iii. The transformation of the northern countryside, c. 1776-1861
3. Plantation-Slavery and Economic Development in the Antebellum Southern
United States
i. The 'planter-capitalism' model
ii. The 'non-bourgeois civilisation' model
iii. Class-structure and economic development in the antebellum-South
4. Agrarian Class-Structure and Economic Development in Colonial British
North America: The Place of the American Revolution in the Origins of US
Capitalism
i. The commercialisation-staples model
ii. The demographic-frontier model
iii. Agrarian social-property relations in colonial British North America
iv. Colonial economic development, the American Revolution, and the
development of capitalism in the US, 1776-1861
5. Social-Property Relations, Class-Conflict and the Origins of the US
Civil War: Toward a New Social Interpretation
i. Ashworth's social interpretation of the US Civil War
ii. A critique of slavery, capitalism and politics in the
antebellum-republic
iii. Toward a new social interpretation of the US Civil War
Conclusion: Democracy against Capitalism in the Post-Civil-War United
States
i. Democracy against capitalism in the North: radicalism, class-struggle
and the rise of liberal democracy, 1863-77
ii. Democracy against capitalism in the South: the rise and fall of
peasant-citizenship, 1865-77
iii. The defeat of populism, 'Jim Crow' and the establishment of capitalist
plantation-agriculture in the South, 1877-1900
References
Index