A History of Capitalism
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Like a good detective story, the history of capitalism begins with a puzzle. For millennia trade had flourished within traditional societies, strictly confined in its economic and moral reach. Yet in the sixteenth century, commerce moved in bold new directions. More effective ways to raise food slowly started to release workers and money for other economic pursuits, such as processing the sugar, tobacco, cotton, tea, and silks that came to Europe from the East and West Indies and beyond. These improvements raised the standard of living for Western Europeans, but it took something more dramatic to break through the restraints of habit and authority of the old economic order. That world-reshaping force came when a group of natural philosophers gained an understanding of physical laws. With this knowledge, inventors with a more practical bent found stunning ways to generate energy from natural forces. Production took a quantum leap forward. CapitalismÑa system based on individual investments in the production of marketable goodsÑslowly replaced the traditional ways of meeting the material needs of a society. From early industrialization to the present global economy, a sequence of revolutions relentlessly changed the habits and habitats of human beings. The puzzle is why it took so long for these developments to materialize.
Most of the marvelous machines that transformed human effort began with simple applications of steam and electricity. How many people had watched steam lift the top off a pan of boiling water before someone figured out how to make steam run an engine? Couldn’t someone earlier have begun experimenting with lightning? The dramatic success of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century innovations compels us to wonder why human societies remained fixed for millennia in a primitive agrarian order. How can it be that brilliant minds penetrated some of the secrets of the cosmos but couldn’t imagine how to combat hunger? The answer that the times were economically backward is of course semantic and doesn’t really help us pierce the conundrum of great civilized accomplishments in the face of limited economic productivity.
.. This is not a general study of capitalism in the world, but rather a narrative that follows the shaping of the economic system that we live with today. Nor does it cover how various countries became capitalistic, but rather concentrates on those specific developments in particular places that gave form to capitalism. My focus is on economic practices, of course, but it can’t be stressed too much that capitalism is as much a cultural as an economic system. A new way of establishing political order emerged. People reversed how they looked at the past and the future.
Excerpted from Relentless Revolution: A History of Capitalism by Joyce Appleby. Copyright (c) 2010 by Joyce Appleby. With permission of the publisher, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Review by Fraser Harbutt
This timely book is a splendid exercise in clarification. It explains a large much-debated conundrum: the development of modern capitalism. When professional economists take on this challenge, they tend to get tangled up in the veils of mystification characteristic of their discipline. But Joyce Appleby is a highly respected, communicating historian, known for the range of her interests. Her approach is distinctive, presenting a primary focus upon the cultural wellsprings of our capitalist framework, which seems to give her account more breadth than a treatment built on a foundation of, say, geopolitics or technological innovation. And she brings to the undeniable complexities of the topic a reassuring common sense and an admirably lucid, accessible prose style.
In tracing the origins of capitalism, Appleby draws her inspiration neither from Adam Smith, whom she finds at fault in assuming that the vital prompt to economic transformation was a natural, inborn instinct for self-advancement, nor from Karl Marx, whose notion of a purposeful class of entrepreneurial exploiters has been similarly influential. Rather than these giants she looks to the culturally-conscious German social theorist, Max Weber. Weber also had a penchant for the governing impulse—in his case the emergence of the God-fearing Protestant—but his approach was more open-minded and emphasized the importance of chance and unintended consequences. Appleby similarly elevates contingency, though in defining capitalism as “some scattered ways of doing things differently that proved so successful that they acquired legs” she appears to concede a degree of self-conscious experience and adjustment.
In some essential respects Appleby conforms to traditional interpretations, though often with an engaging gloss or a bold qualification. Thus England is confirmed as the place where capitalism got started, but the time is pushed back from the conventional starting point of the 18th-century Industrial Revolution (which she suggests “is to start an account of a pregnancy in the fifth month”) to changes she discerns in the late 16th century. From that point on a sequence of developments—an agricultural revolution freeing up labor and capital, the appearance of risk-taking entrepreneurs, technological advances and so on—brought significant economic change which in turn began to transform the culture from which it sprang.
Much of the book traces these gradual, sometimes haphazard but relentlessly interweaving changes up to our own time. Major themes such as the influence of slavery, the coming of factory systems, the faith-sapping business cycles and depressions, the impact of 20th-century wars, the advance of globalization bringing in countries like India and China are balanced by the discussion of topics like the American and German challenge to British supremacy and supplemented by intriguing references to subjects like the role of banks and the rising significance of consumerism.
Overall this is a very enjoyable book that is also an excellent overview, combining fresh interpretation and critical commentary on a subject of surpassing contemporary interest and importance.
Hardcover: 512 pages
Publisher: W.W. Norton & Co. Inc. ( January 01, 2010 )
Item #: 78-4715
ISBN: 9780393068948
Product Dimensions: 6.125 x 9.25 x 1.2 inches
Product Weight: 24.0 ounces

I started this book with some enthusiasm, which disappeared on page 10. The following is in the first paragraph, "Unlike most of the native tribes in the New World, Africans were accustomed to the disciplined work of mining and farming. Aboriginal Americans made poor slaves; they often simply died of despair when chained to work." This view is straight out of history textbooks I was given to read in grammar school and high school back in the 1950s. This view shows an abysmal ignorance and is offensive in it's Eurocentric arrogance and racism.
Reviewer: Eileen S