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The Long Twentieth Century PDF

432 Pages·2013·2.37 MB·English
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Th e Long Twentieth Century Th e Long Twentieth Century Money, Power, and the Origins of Our Times GIOVANNI ARRIGHI First published by Verso 1994 Th is edition published by Verso 2010 © Giovanni Arrighi 1994, 2010 New material © Giovanni Arrighi 2010 All rights reserved Verso UK: 6 Meard Street, London W1F 0EG USA: 20 Jay Street, New York, NY 11201 Verso is the imprint of New Left Books ISBN-13: 978-1-84467-304-9 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress Typeset by Hewer Text UK Ltd, Edinburgh Printed in the USA by Maple Vail Contents List of Figures vii Preface and Acknowledgements xi Introduction 1 1 the three hegemonies of historical capitalism 28 Hegemony, Capitalism, and Territorialism 28 Th e Origins of the Modern Interstate System 37 British Hegemony and Free-Trade Imperialism 48 US Hegemony and the Rise of the Free Enterprise System 59 Towards a New Research Agenda 75 2 the rise of capital 86 Th e Antecedents of Systemic Cycles of Accumulation 86 Th e Genesis of High Finance 97 Th e First (Genoese) Systemic Cycle of Accumulation 111 Th e Second (Dutch) Systemic Cycle of Accumulation 130 Th e Dialectic of State and Capital 148 3 industry, empire, and the “endless” accumulation of capital 163 Th e Th ird (British) Systemic Cycle of Accumulation 163 Th e Dialectic of Capitalism and Territorialism 179 Th e Dialectic of Capitalism and Territorialism (Continued) 200 Reprise and Preview 219 v vi the long twentieth century 4 the long twentieth century 247 Th e Dialectic of Market and Plan 247 Th e Fourth (US) Systemic Cycle of Accumulation 277 Th e Dynamics of Global Crisis 309 epilogue: can capitalism survive success? 336 postscript to the second edition 371 References 387 Index 405 List of Figures 1.1 Mensch’s Metamorphosis Model 10 2.1 Total Silver Coinage in England, 1273–1470 101 2.2 Trends in the Cloth Trade: Shipments from England and Production at Ypres 101 2.3 Mediterranean Routes of Genoa and Venice in the Middle ages 121 2.4 Th e Genoese Space-of-Flows, Late Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries 136 2.5 Volume of Grain Shipments through the Sound, 1562–1780 136 3.1 British Capital Exports, 1820–1915 167 3.2 Th e Sixteenth-century Trade Expansion 175 3.3 Th e Nineteenth-century Trade Expansion 175 3.4 Long Centuries and Systemic Cycles of Accumulation 220 3.5 Ideotypical Trajectory of Mercantile Expansions 232 3.6 Hick’s Model of Mercantile Expansions 232 3.7 Bifurcation in the Trajectory of Mercantile Expansions 235 3.8 Model of Local Turbulence 242 3.9 Model of Systemic Turbulence 242 3.10 Metamorphosis Model of Systemic Cycles of Accumulation 242 4.1 US Trade Balance and Current Account, 1896–1956 280 4.2 US Gold Reserves and Short-term Liabilities, 1950–72 311 4.3 Outfl ow of Foreign Direct Investments of Developed Market Economy Countries Distributed by Geographical Regions of Origin, 1950–83 313 4.4 Long-term Interest Rates in the United States, 1965–84 327 E.1 Th e Rise of East Asia in Comparative Perspective 344 E.2 Income Gaps versus Industrialization Gaps 347 E.3 Rate of Increase of Accumulated Japanese Direct Foreign Investment 361 E.4 Th e East Asian Space-of-Flows, Late Twentieth Century 361 P.1 Evolutionary Patterns of World Capitalism 375 vii To my graduate students at SUNY-Binghamton, 1979–94

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antiquity this loss of autonomy meant the end of political capitalism, in the next century and a half – from the outbreak of the Anglo-Dutch Wars in 1652 from 1348 by the ravages of the Black Death and subsequent epidemics, .. dogmatic supporters in late twentieth-century US academic circles.
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