ABSTRACT

Ten anthropologists trace the machinations of war and the effects of violence in capitalist states, from their formation to the present. This collection, the newest volume in the War and Society series, questions the foundations of classical social theory while investigating local and international conflict through the critical and cross-cultural lens of social theory, history, and anthropology. The essays combine to challenge the notion developed by social theorists such as Comte, Spencer, Durkheim, and Engels that war will diminish with the formation and the perpetuation of a capitalist economy and industry. The development of capitalist states, and the nefarious and violent processes which must occur to reproduce capitalism, are rarely realized and then infrequently analyzed. Many western and ethnocentric scholarly representations of war succeed in hiding the deadly developments that occur as a result of capitalist state formation and relations.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

Deadly Developments and Phantasmagoric Representations

chapter 1|46 pages

The Force of Two Logics

Predatory and Capital Accumulation in the Making of the Great Leviathan, 1415–1763

chapter 2|16 pages

Colonialism and the Efflorescence of warfare

The New Ireland Case

chapter 3|19 pages

Insurrection in the Texas Mexican Borderlands

The Plan of San Diego

chapter 4|27 pages

War in Uganda

North and South

chapter 5|20 pages

Warf are in the Lower Omo Valley, Southwestern Ethiopia

Reconciling Materialist and Political Explanations

chapter 6|24 pages

Requiem for the Rational War

chapter 8|23 pages

Ethnicity and Land Tenure in the Sahel

chapter 9|45 pages

Detour onto the Shining Path

Obscuring the Social Revolution in the Andes