(Headline) "Modern U.S. Racial Capitalism" (Lede) "Some Theoretical Insights" by Charisse Burden-Stelly (1 July 2020)
Source: Monthly Review "You can't have capitalism without racism." Source: Peter James Hudson on “The African Origins of Racial Capitalism.” In recent years, “racial capitalism” has ascended across the humanities and social sciences. It has arisen as a conceptual framework to understand the mutually constitutive nature of racialization and capitalist exploitation, inter alia, on a global scale, in specific localities, in discrete historical moments, in the entrenchment of the carceral state, and in the era of neoliberalization and permanent war. 1 This increased interest, interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary in nature, is conveyed in the myriad race and capitalism debates, including between political scientist Michael Dawson and feminist philosopher Nancy Fraser; in the initiation of the multi-institution Race and Capitalism Project; in the formation of the racial capitalism working group in the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia Univer