Xavier Lafrance
The Making of Capitalism in France
Class Structures, Economic Development, the State and the Formation of the French Working Class, 1750-1914
Xavier Lafrance
The Making of Capitalism in France
Class Structures, Economic Development, the State and the Formation of the French Working Class, 1750-1914
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Political Scientist Xavier Lafrance provides a pathbreaking account of the emergence of capitalism in France.
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Political Scientist Xavier Lafrance provides a pathbreaking account of the emergence of capitalism in France.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 155mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 428g
- ISBN-13: 9781642591880
- ISBN-10: 1642591882
- Artikelnr.: 58854744
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 155mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 428g
- ISBN-13: 9781642591880
- ISBN-10: 1642591882
- Artikelnr.: 58854744
Xavier Lafrance, Ph.D. (2013), York University, is Professor of political science at the Université du Québec à Montréal. With Charles Post, he is the editor of Case Studies in the Origins of Capitalism(Palgrave 2018).
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Problematising Capitalism
Importing Capitalism to France
Chapter 1 The Old Regime False Start: Attempts at Liberal Reforms
and the Absence of a Transition to Capitalism in Absolutist France
Absolutist France vs Capitalist England
British Competition and French Liberal Reactions
An Extensive Mode of Economic Development
Chapter 2 Non-Capitalist Industrialisation in Post-Revolutionary France
Nineteenth-Century France Economic Development: The Revisionist Account
Contrasting French and English Nineteenth-Century Industrial Development
The Non-Competitive Nature of French Markets
The Development of Cotton Production and Metallurgy
Opportunity-Driven Growth in Non-Competitive Markets
Chapter 3 The French Revolution and the Customary Regulation of Labour
Reassessing the French Revolution
Guilds and Workers’ Struggles under the Old Regime
The Persistence of Customary Regulations and Aspects of Labour Emancipation
in Post-Revolutionary France
The Absence of Labour Subsumption by Capital in Post-Revolutionary France
Chapter 4 The Rise of the French Working Class: Republican and Socialist
Struggles against Extra-Economic Exploitation
The Composition and the Making of the French Working Class
Notables, the State, and the Perpetuation of Non-Capitalist Surplus
Appropriation
Pinning Down Social Ills, Naming the Antagonists
The Revolution of 1830 and the Rise of a Republican-Socialist Working
Class
The Revolution of 1848 and the (Interrupted) Rise of the Democratic and
Social Republic
Chapter 5 The State-Led Capitalist Transformation of French Industry
Geopolitical Competition and Capitalist Industrialisation
Building Foundations: The Making of a Competitive Market
The Erosion of Customary Regulations and the Subsumption of Labour
The Emergence of Capitalist Patterns of Investment
Changing Modes of Surplus Appropriation and (Partial) State Restructuring
Chapter 6 Capitalism and the Re-Making of the French Working Class
The Re-Composition of the Working Class
The Labour Movement under the Second Empire and the Paris Commune
The Rise of the Strike: Refusing the Depoliticisation of Production
The Transformation of Class Relations and the Rise of an
Autonomous Socialist Working-Class Movement
Conclusion
References
Index
Introduction
Problematising Capitalism
Importing Capitalism to France
Chapter 1 The Old Regime False Start: Attempts at Liberal Reforms
and the Absence of a Transition to Capitalism in Absolutist France
Absolutist France vs Capitalist England
British Competition and French Liberal Reactions
An Extensive Mode of Economic Development
Chapter 2 Non-Capitalist Industrialisation in Post-Revolutionary France
Nineteenth-Century France Economic Development: The Revisionist Account
Contrasting French and English Nineteenth-Century Industrial Development
The Non-Competitive Nature of French Markets
The Development of Cotton Production and Metallurgy
Opportunity-Driven Growth in Non-Competitive Markets
Chapter 3 The French Revolution and the Customary Regulation of Labour
Reassessing the French Revolution
Guilds and Workers’ Struggles under the Old Regime
The Persistence of Customary Regulations and Aspects of Labour Emancipation
in Post-Revolutionary France
The Absence of Labour Subsumption by Capital in Post-Revolutionary France
Chapter 4 The Rise of the French Working Class: Republican and Socialist
Struggles against Extra-Economic Exploitation
The Composition and the Making of the French Working Class
Notables, the State, and the Perpetuation of Non-Capitalist Surplus
Appropriation
Pinning Down Social Ills, Naming the Antagonists
The Revolution of 1830 and the Rise of a Republican-Socialist Working
Class
The Revolution of 1848 and the (Interrupted) Rise of the Democratic and
Social Republic
Chapter 5 The State-Led Capitalist Transformation of French Industry
Geopolitical Competition and Capitalist Industrialisation
Building Foundations: The Making of a Competitive Market
The Erosion of Customary Regulations and the Subsumption of Labour
The Emergence of Capitalist Patterns of Investment
Changing Modes of Surplus Appropriation and (Partial) State Restructuring
Chapter 6 Capitalism and the Re-Making of the French Working Class
The Re-Composition of the Working Class
The Labour Movement under the Second Empire and the Paris Commune
The Rise of the Strike: Refusing the Depoliticisation of Production
The Transformation of Class Relations and the Rise of an
Autonomous Socialist Working-Class Movement
Conclusion
References
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Problematising Capitalism
Importing Capitalism to France
Chapter 1 The Old Regime False Start: Attempts at Liberal Reforms
and the Absence of a Transition to Capitalism in Absolutist France
Absolutist France vs Capitalist England
British Competition and French Liberal Reactions
An Extensive Mode of Economic Development
Chapter 2 Non-Capitalist Industrialisation in Post-Revolutionary France
Nineteenth-Century France Economic Development: The Revisionist Account
Contrasting French and English Nineteenth-Century Industrial Development
The Non-Competitive Nature of French Markets
The Development of Cotton Production and Metallurgy
Opportunity-Driven Growth in Non-Competitive Markets
Chapter 3 The French Revolution and the Customary Regulation of Labour
Reassessing the French Revolution
Guilds and Workers’ Struggles under the Old Regime
The Persistence of Customary Regulations and Aspects of Labour Emancipation
in Post-Revolutionary France
The Absence of Labour Subsumption by Capital in Post-Revolutionary France
Chapter 4 The Rise of the French Working Class: Republican and Socialist
Struggles against Extra-Economic Exploitation
The Composition and the Making of the French Working Class
Notables, the State, and the Perpetuation of Non-Capitalist Surplus
Appropriation
Pinning Down Social Ills, Naming the Antagonists
The Revolution of 1830 and the Rise of a Republican-Socialist Working
Class
The Revolution of 1848 and the (Interrupted) Rise of the Democratic and
Social Republic
Chapter 5 The State-Led Capitalist Transformation of French Industry
Geopolitical Competition and Capitalist Industrialisation
Building Foundations: The Making of a Competitive Market
The Erosion of Customary Regulations and the Subsumption of Labour
The Emergence of Capitalist Patterns of Investment
Changing Modes of Surplus Appropriation and (Partial) State Restructuring
Chapter 6 Capitalism and the Re-Making of the French Working Class
The Re-Composition of the Working Class
The Labour Movement under the Second Empire and the Paris Commune
The Rise of the Strike: Refusing the Depoliticisation of Production
The Transformation of Class Relations and the Rise of an
Autonomous Socialist Working-Class Movement
Conclusion
References
Index
Introduction
Problematising Capitalism
Importing Capitalism to France
Chapter 1 The Old Regime False Start: Attempts at Liberal Reforms
and the Absence of a Transition to Capitalism in Absolutist France
Absolutist France vs Capitalist England
British Competition and French Liberal Reactions
An Extensive Mode of Economic Development
Chapter 2 Non-Capitalist Industrialisation in Post-Revolutionary France
Nineteenth-Century France Economic Development: The Revisionist Account
Contrasting French and English Nineteenth-Century Industrial Development
The Non-Competitive Nature of French Markets
The Development of Cotton Production and Metallurgy
Opportunity-Driven Growth in Non-Competitive Markets
Chapter 3 The French Revolution and the Customary Regulation of Labour
Reassessing the French Revolution
Guilds and Workers’ Struggles under the Old Regime
The Persistence of Customary Regulations and Aspects of Labour Emancipation
in Post-Revolutionary France
The Absence of Labour Subsumption by Capital in Post-Revolutionary France
Chapter 4 The Rise of the French Working Class: Republican and Socialist
Struggles against Extra-Economic Exploitation
The Composition and the Making of the French Working Class
Notables, the State, and the Perpetuation of Non-Capitalist Surplus
Appropriation
Pinning Down Social Ills, Naming the Antagonists
The Revolution of 1830 and the Rise of a Republican-Socialist Working
Class
The Revolution of 1848 and the (Interrupted) Rise of the Democratic and
Social Republic
Chapter 5 The State-Led Capitalist Transformation of French Industry
Geopolitical Competition and Capitalist Industrialisation
Building Foundations: The Making of a Competitive Market
The Erosion of Customary Regulations and the Subsumption of Labour
The Emergence of Capitalist Patterns of Investment
Changing Modes of Surplus Appropriation and (Partial) State Restructuring
Chapter 6 Capitalism and the Re-Making of the French Working Class
The Re-Composition of the Working Class
The Labour Movement under the Second Empire and the Paris Commune
The Rise of the Strike: Refusing the Depoliticisation of Production
The Transformation of Class Relations and the Rise of an
Autonomous Socialist Working-Class Movement
Conclusion
References
Index