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"Racial Capitalism"
Format: Paperback
Cedric J. Robinsonโs Black Marxism is first a history of Black people appearing in historical texts as far back as Herodotus (c. 484 โ c. 425 BCE) in ancient Greece, and second a history of โthe collisions of the Black and white โracesโ beginning in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.โ Robinsonโs thesis connects the evolution of capitalism to its roots in racism (racialism) understood in broad terms to comprise the subjugation of one class/group/nation/race by another (the Irish by the English in the nineteenth century, for example). He uses the term โracial capitalismโ to express this processโthe necessity of opposing classes for the function of capitalism. As a result, โracialism,โ he says, โwould inevitably permeate the social structures emergent from capitalism.โ Keynes attributed the slow change in the โstandard of life of the average manโ until the beginning of the eighteenth century to โthe remarkable absence of important technical improvements and to the failure of capital to accumulate.โ Capital is accumulated, in Marxโs view, through the accretion of โsurplus laborโ which is the extra time a worker โmust add to the working time necessary for his own maintenance . . . in order to produce the means of subsistence for the owners of the means of production.โ Robinson ties capitalismโs early exploitation of surplus labor to slave labor and the slave trade noting, โhistorically, slavery was a critical foundation for capitalism.โ Robinson traces the forced transport of Black people from Africa (the diaspora) to Europe, as well as Central, South, and North America as a foundation of early capitalism (and slavery as its form of โprimitive accumulationโ of capital). In his discussions of slavery, Robinson stresses the sense of the enslaved people with respect to their captors in terms of the slavesโ resistance, hostility, and defiance of the mastersโtheir โBlack radicalism.โ As Robinsonโs text approaches the twentieth century and the influence of Marx, his focus narrows to the significance and character of specific Black leaders including W. E. B. Du Bois, C. L. R. James, and Richard Wright and their respective connections to Marxismโs diverse interpretations. Marxism, says Robinson, โhas proven insufficiently radical to expose and root out the racialist order that contaminates its analytic and philosophic applications or to come to effective terms with the implications of its own class origins.โ
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Reviewed in the United States on September 2, 2022