Colonial Capitalism and the Dilemmas of Liberalism – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780190637293,0190637293,9780190637316, 0190637315
Product detail:
- ISBN 10: 0190637315
- ISBN 13: 9780190637316
- Author: Onur Ulas Ince
By the mid-nineteenth century, Britain celebrated its possession of a unique “empire of liberty” that propagated the rule of private property, free trade, and free labor across the globe. The British also knew that their empire had been built by conquering overseas territories, trading slaves, and extorting tribute from other societies. Set in the context of the early-modern British Empire, Colonial Capitalism and the Dilemmas of Liberalism paints a striking picture of these tensions between the illiberal origins of capitalism and its liberal imaginations in metropolitan thought. Onur Ulas Ince combines an analysis of political economy and political theory to examine the impact of colonial economic relations on the development of liberal thought in Britain. He shows how a liberal self-image for the British Empire was constructed in the face of the systematic expropriation, exploitation, and servitude that built its transoceanic capitalist economy. The resilience of Britain’s self-image was due in large part to the liberal intellectuals of empire, such as John Locke, Edmund Burke, and Edward Gibbon Wakefield, and their efforts to disavow the violent transformations that propelled British colonial capitalism. Ince forcefully demonstrates that liberalism as a language of politics was elaborated in and through the political economic debates around the contested meanings of private property, market exchange, and free labor.Weaving together intellectual history, critical theory, and colonial studies, this book is a bold attempt to reconceptualize the historical relationship between capitalism, liberalism, and empire in a way that continues to resonate with our present moment.
Table of contents:
- 1. Colonial Capitalism and the Dilemmas of Liberalism: Framing an Inquiry
- Liberalism and Empire: Rematerializing a Field
- New Dilemmas of Liberalism
- Conclusion: Stereoscopic View of History
- 2. In the Beginning, All the World Was America: John Locke’s Global Theory of Property
- Locke and the Atlantic
- Money and Morality of Accumulation
- Money, Possession, and Dispossession
- Conclusion: Beyond Possessive Individualism
- 3. Not a Partnership in Pepper, Coffee, Calico, or Tobacco: Edmund Burke and the Vicissitudes of Imperial Commerce
- Empire and Commercial Capitalism in India
- Burke’s Commercial Ideal
- Imperious Commerce
- Burke’s “Peculiar Universalism” Revisited
- Conclusion: Imperial Frontiersmen, Gentlemanly Capitalists
- 4. Letters from Sydney: Edward Gibbon Wakefield and the Problem of Colonial Labor
- Political Labor Problem: The Metropole
- Economic Labor Problem: The Colony
- Systematic Colonization: Capital and Empire