The Pristine Culture of Capitalism: A Historical Essay on Old Regimes and Modern States (Verso World History)

by Ellen Meiksins Wood

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for The Pristine Culture of Capitalism

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

Capitalism was born in England, yet the dominant Western conceptions of modernity have come from elsewhere, notably from France, the historical model of “bourgeois” society. In this lively and wide-ranging book, Ellen Meiksins Wood argues that what is supposed to have epitomized bourgeois modernity, especially the emergence of a “modern” state and political culture in Continental Europe, signalled the persistence of precapitalist social property relations. Conversely, the absence of a “modern” state and political discourse in England testified to the presence of a well-developed capitalism. The fundamental flaws in the British economy are not just the symptoms of arrested development but the contradictions of the capitalist system itself. Britain today, Wood maintains, is the most thoroughly capitalist culture in Europe.

Weaving together economic and political history with the history of ideas, Wood ranges across a broad spectrum of current debates, from the “Nairn–Anderson theses” to the contribution of J.C.D. Clark and Alan Macfarlane, and over a wide variety of topics: the development of British capitalism and French absolutism; the state, the nation and their symbolic representations; revolution and tradition; the cultural patterns of English speech, urbanism, ruralism and the landscape garden; ideas of sovereignty, democracy, property and progress.

This book will be as interesting and provocative to observers of contemporary capitalism as to historians of early modern Europe or Western political thought.
  • ISBN10 0860913414
  • ISBN13 9780860913412
  • Publish Date 31 December 1992 (first published 15 November 1991)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Verso Books
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 160
  • Language English