Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Making Markets
1. The Capitalist Constitution, by Woody Holton
2. What Was the Great Bull Market? Value, Valuation, and Financial
History, by Julia Ott
3. The New York City Fiscal Crisis and the Idea of the State, by
Kim Phillips-Fein
Part II. Claiming and Contesting Capitalism
4. Utopian Capitalism, by Richard White
5. The Sovereign Market and Sex Difference: Human Rights in
America, by Amy Dru Stanley
6. Negro Cloth: Mastering the Market for Slave Clothing in
Antebellum America, by Seth Rockman
7. Revulsions of Capital: Slavery and Political Economy in the
Epoch of the Turner Rebellion, Virginia,
1829–1832, by Christopher Tomlins
Part III. “Knowing” Capital
8. Risk, Uncertainty, and Data: Managing Risk in Twentieth-Century
America, by Mary Poovey
9. Representations of Capitalism in the Gilded Age and Progressive
Era, by Peter Knight
10. Value of Life: Insurance, Slavery, and Expertise, by Michael
Ralph
Part IV. Refiguring Space from the Local to the Global
11. War by Other Means: Mercantilism and Free Trade in the Age of
the American Revolution, by Eliga H. Gould
12. “Innovative Solutions to Modern Agriculture”: Capitalist
Farming, Global Competition, and the Devolution of the U.S. Rice
Industry, by Peter A. Coclanis
13. Importing the World’s Fair, by Michael Zakim
14. Plantation Dispossessions: The Global Travel of Agricultural
Racial Capitalism, by Kris Manjapra
Selected Bibliography
List of Contributors
Index
Sven Beckert is Laird Bell Professor of History at Harvard University and cofounder of the Program on the Study of Capitalism. He is the author of Empire of Cotton: A Global History (2014). Christine Desan is Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law at Harvard University and cofounder of the Program on the Study of Capitalism. She is the author of Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism (2014).
Sven Beckert and Christine Desan are leaders in the burgeoning history of capitalism field, and they have put together a volume of outstanding scholars whose essays, in their chronological reach and subject matter, show this new literature at its best. A very fine and promising collection. -- Steven Hahn, New York University
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