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abstract

  • Labor historiography in the contexts of modern racial slavery and emancipation has long placed changes in the status of work at the core of the very meaning of captivity and freedom, their epochal watersheds, and institutionalized or unintended overlaps. Reviewing, in this journal's pages, recent scholarship on the relations between slavery and capitalism, James Oakes summarized that the crucial differences between the political economy of slave and free labor ultimately led to a catastrophic Civil War and one of the most violent emancipations in the hemisphere. The literature Oakes critically discussed exemplifies the growing academic interest in the multifarious functionality of coerced production for the development of global capitalism. The resulting picture reaches much further than mere questions of economic causality, or whether chattel slavery did kick-start the profitability of capitalism, rather than the other way around. At stake are explanations of how racial captivitywhich liberal economic, political, and moral discourse deems an anachronismshapes the very productive, financial, social, institutional, and philosophical foundations of the global present. Historic and contemporary activist resistance to recurring and ubiquitous waves of antiblack violence, as well as the increasingly self-confident affirmation of white supremacy across Western states and civil societies has rendered such dilemmas in starker terms, asking whether persistent echoes of racial slavery are symptoms that the system is built this way rather than being just broken.

author list (cited authors)

  • Barchiesi, F., & Jackson, S. N.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Barchiesi, Franco||Jackson, Shona N

publication date

  • January 2019