ABSTRACT

The Economics of Empire: Genealogies of Capital and the Colonial Encounter is a multidisciplinary intervention into postcolonial theory that constructs and theorizes a political economy of empire.

This comprehensive collection traces the financial genealogies associated with the colonial enterprise, the strategies of economic precarity, the pedigrees of capital, and the narratives of exploitation that underlay and determined the course of modern history. One of the first attempts to take this approach in postcolonial studies, the book seeks to sketch the commensal relation—a symbiotic "phoresy"—between capitalism and colonialism, reading them as linked structures that carried and sustained each other through and across the modern era. The scholars represented here are all postcolonial critics working in a range of disciplines, including Political Science, Sociology, History, Peace and Conflict Studies, Legal Studies, and Literary Criticism, exploring the connections between empire and capital, and the historical and political implications of that structural hinge. Each author engages existing postcolonial and poststructuralist theory and criticism while bridging it over to research and analytic lenses less frequently engaged by postcolonial critics. In so doing, they devise novel intersectional and interdisciplinary frameworks through which to produce more greatly nuanced understandings of imperialism, capitalism, and their inextricable relation, "new" postcolonial critiques of empire for the twenty-first century.

This book will be an excellent resource for students and researchers of Postcolonial Studies, Literature, History, Sociology, Economics, Political Science and International Studies, among others.

chapter 1|38 pages

Introduction—empire’s license

Structural thievery and the political life of appropriated capital

chapter 2|18 pages

Decolonizing capital

Indian political economy in the shadow of empire

chapter 3|16 pages

Criminal cities

Economics and empire in Belfast and Johannesburg

chapter 4|19 pages

Interrogating legal world-making through genre

Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book and colonial reparations

chapter 5|15 pages

Trading in women’s “troubles”

Fertility control and postcolonial exchanges in Irish history

chapter 7|19 pages

Waste lands and preserves

Olive Schreiner’s ecological allegories and colonial Zimbabwe

chapter 8|23 pages

Unearthing land and labor disputes in Tunisia

An uneven and combined development approach to tribal/management councils 1

chapter 9|17 pages

Derailing the rail

Indian–Kenyan solidarity in contemporary Anglophone fiction

chapter 11|25 pages

Devalued knowledge

Colonized post-socialism