Sven Beckert’s Chronicle of Capitalism’s Long Rise

Review of Capitalism: A Global History by Sven Beckert (Penguin Press, 2025)

Sven Beckert’s doorstop of a book is supremely ambitious, an insightful and well-illustrated history by the Harvard historian who has been a pioneer in the creation of new narratives exploring how an ever-changing capitalism has been a socially and culturally rooted phenomenon. At well over a thousand pages, Beckert’s volume offers a synthesis and occasional recasting of almost everything we have learned about the history of capitalism, and not just in the closely studied societies bordering the North Atlantic. It is a global history, holds Beckert, because capitalism “was always a world economy.” Writing within the world-systems schema associated with Fernand Braudel and Immanuel Wallerstein, he probes for the connections, parallelisms, and transformations taking place within an economic and social history stretching back almost a thousand years.

Historian Marc Bloch once wrote that carefully observing the world was just as important in understanding history as time spent in the archives. Beckert agrees. His book is a result not just of an immense amount of bookish research but of visits to factories, plantations, warehouses, railroads, docks, mansions, mosques, churches, and merchant homes stretching from Phnom Penh to Senegal, from Samarkand to Amsterdam, and from Turin to Barbados. I can attest to the importance of such travel: twenty years ago when I visited China’s Pearl River Delta, then becoming the workshop of the world, I not only gained crucial insights into how Walmart sourced its supply chain but also came to a more intuitive understanding of what a booming and fissiparous Detroit must have seemed like nearly a century before.

“There is no French capitalism or American capitalism,” writes Beckert, “but only capitalism in France or America.” And there is also capitalism in Arabia, India, China, Africa, and even among the Aztecs. In his narrative of…

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Auteur: Nelson Lichtenstein

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