Preface: Capital Questions and the Disinherited Majority: A Map; Introduction: Piketty for the People: Caste, Class, and the Disinherited Majority; Chapter 1 The Piketty Phenomenon; Chapter 2 What’s the Matter with Economics?; Chapter 3 Economics with Class; Chapter 4 True Class; Chapter 5 Caste and Class; Chapter 5a The Worthy and Unworthy Rich, Yale Magrass; Chapter 6 The Problem with Markets; Chapter 7 Extreme Inequality and the Einstein Formula; Chapter 8 The Death of Meritocracy; Chapter 9 The Future of the American Dream; Chapter 10 Wealth and War; Chapter 11 The Climate of Capitalism; Chapter 11a Reading Capital in the Anthropocene, Juliet B. Schor; Chapter 12 Capitalism vs. Democracy; Chapter 13 The Social State and Economic Democracy; Chapter 13a Thomas Piketty and Wealth Taxation in America, Chuck Collins, Josh Hoxie; Chapter 14 The New Politics; Chapter 15 Interview with Thomas Piketty;
Charles Derber, Professor of Sociology at Boston College, has written for Newsday, Newsweek, Business Week, Time, the Christian Science Monitor, and other magazines. He speaks frequently on National Public Radio, talk radio, and television. His most recent book is Capitalism: Should You Buy It? An Invitation to Political Economy (Paradigm 2014).
“In The Disinherited Majority, Charles Derber insightfully picks up
where Thomas Piketty leaves off, making clear that the stubborn
inequality of capitalism is not just a mechanical process but one
that must be understood socially and politically.”
—Robert Kuttner, Co-Editor, The American Prospect
"This book carries forward in an accessible and highly informative
way "the new global conversation about money and morality in a
troubled capitalist world" provoked by Thomas Piketty's important
and influential study. Issues of prime importance are addressed.
The book succeeds admirably in its aim of drawing anyone who is
concerned with the deep and often painful problems of contemporary
society into this conversation as an active participant, a
necessary precondition for any hope for a more democratic and just
future."
—Noam Chomsky
"A brilliant, provocative, and illuminating engagement. Derber
shows where and how Piketty's flawed masterpiece can help spark and
shape an urgently required new popular movement for social justice
and democracy in the United States."
—Paul Street, Author of They Rule: The 1% vs. Democracy
“This book is stunning in the scope of ideas it covers in a concise
but deep and rich manner. Readers, including students studying
economics, political science, sociology, history, business, public
policy, public health and social justice, will dig into this book
with great intrigue and excitement. My students will find this book
an exciting platform from which to intensely debate the vast
inequalities of wealth and power in today’s world, and to equally
intensely seek solutions.”
—Jonathan White, Author of The Engaged Sociologist: Connecting the
Classroom to the Community
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