Colonial Capitalism and the Dilemmas of Liberalism
Autor Onur Ulas Inceen Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 mar 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197506400
ISBN-10: 0197506402
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197506402
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Onur Ulas Ince's excellent book works a subtle but momentous transformation on the burgeoning political theory scholarship on colonialism and empire.
By bringing the history of capitalism back to the fore of political theory, Ince has presented us with a powerful and urgent contribution to the field that bears as much on the study of liberalism and empire as on ongoing interpretive debates over historical context.
Ince's innovative readings of these three thinkers reframe liberal theory as intimately and constitutively bound up with the predations of colonial capitalism
In a lively, original analysis of British imperialism, one that ranges across continents as well as centuries, Ince provocatively makes the case for taking the history of capitalism seriously. It deserves to be read by anyone invested in the liberalism and empire debate.
Ince's clever historical study of liberal ideology analyzes the attempt by John Locke, Edmund Burke, and Edward Gibbon Wakefield to figure liberal democratic values as compatible with capitalism in the British colonies. ... Against but also augmenting competing arguments that explain colonialism via British culturalist arrogance or one-dimensional universal cosmopolitanism, Ince (Singapore Management Univ., Singapore) shows how key aspects of political economy (in Locke, money; in Burke, commercial society; in Wakefield, nominally "free" labor and artificially produced scarcity in land) provided moral insulation for imperial expansion: a distinctively British empire of liberty.
This is an original and important survey of the co-creation of the intertwined languages of both English political economy and liberal political theory in relation to colonization and capitalism from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries." JAMES TULLY, Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria
This innovative, superbly written book challenges political theory's 'turn to empire' by pressing inquiry into the historical relationship between imperialism and liberalism beyond philosophical questions and symbolic politics. Rather, Ince insists we reintegrate the exploitative violence of colonial capitalism into analyses of the conceptual universe in which ideological liberalism was first articulated. In so doing, he illuminates the historical complexity of liberalism in our 'colonial present." JEANNE MOREFIELD, author of Empires Without Imperialism
Over the past fifty years, the dialogue between political economy, social history, and intellectual history has been minimal even while all three disciplines have turned their focus upon the relationship between liberalism and empire. In a challenge to us all, this book reconnects these disciplines in order to achieve a deeper understanding of a relationship which is foundational to the increasingly globalized present." ANDREW FITZMAURICE, University of Sydney
Onur Ulas Ince's Colonial Capitalism and the Dilemmas of Liberalism succeeds in demonstrating the importance of political economy for political theory's imperial turn, preoccupied as it has been with a discursive approach to cultural difference." - Corey Snelgrove, University of British Columbia
That in the course of his intrepid and penetrating study Ince both decisively renovates and effectively supersedes the Macphersonite scheme is thrilling." - Samuel Moyn, Perspectives on Politics
By bringing the history of capitalism back to the fore of political theory, Ince has presented us with a powerful and urgent contribution to the field that bears as much on the study of liberalism and empire as on ongoing interpretive debates over historical context.
Ince's innovative readings of these three thinkers reframe liberal theory as intimately and constitutively bound up with the predations of colonial capitalism
In a lively, original analysis of British imperialism, one that ranges across continents as well as centuries, Ince provocatively makes the case for taking the history of capitalism seriously. It deserves to be read by anyone invested in the liberalism and empire debate.
Ince's clever historical study of liberal ideology analyzes the attempt by John Locke, Edmund Burke, and Edward Gibbon Wakefield to figure liberal democratic values as compatible with capitalism in the British colonies. ... Against but also augmenting competing arguments that explain colonialism via British culturalist arrogance or one-dimensional universal cosmopolitanism, Ince (Singapore Management Univ., Singapore) shows how key aspects of political economy (in Locke, money; in Burke, commercial society; in Wakefield, nominally "free" labor and artificially produced scarcity in land) provided moral insulation for imperial expansion: a distinctively British empire of liberty.
This is an original and important survey of the co-creation of the intertwined languages of both English political economy and liberal political theory in relation to colonization and capitalism from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries." JAMES TULLY, Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria
This innovative, superbly written book challenges political theory's 'turn to empire' by pressing inquiry into the historical relationship between imperialism and liberalism beyond philosophical questions and symbolic politics. Rather, Ince insists we reintegrate the exploitative violence of colonial capitalism into analyses of the conceptual universe in which ideological liberalism was first articulated. In so doing, he illuminates the historical complexity of liberalism in our 'colonial present." JEANNE MOREFIELD, author of Empires Without Imperialism
Over the past fifty years, the dialogue between political economy, social history, and intellectual history has been minimal even while all three disciplines have turned their focus upon the relationship between liberalism and empire. In a challenge to us all, this book reconnects these disciplines in order to achieve a deeper understanding of a relationship which is foundational to the increasingly globalized present." ANDREW FITZMAURICE, University of Sydney
Onur Ulas Ince's Colonial Capitalism and the Dilemmas of Liberalism succeeds in demonstrating the importance of political economy for political theory's imperial turn, preoccupied as it has been with a discursive approach to cultural difference." - Corey Snelgrove, University of British Columbia
That in the course of his intrepid and penetrating study Ince both decisively renovates and effectively supersedes the Macphersonite scheme is thrilling." - Samuel Moyn, Perspectives on Politics
Notă biografică
Onur Ulas Ince is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Singapore Management University and Fung Global Fellow at the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies. He mainly investigates how socioeconomic transformations constitutive of global capitalism have shaped and in turn have been shaped by various discourses of political economy since the early-modern period. His research has been published in The Journal of Politics, History of Political Thought, New Political Economy, The Review of Politics, Polity, and Rural Sociology. He has received his PhD in Government from Cornell University.