Empire of Capital
Author: Ellen Meiksins Wood
Publisher: Verso
Published: 2005-01-17
Total Pages: 206
ISBN-13: 9781844675180
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWhat does imperialism mean in the absence of colonial conquest and imperial rule?
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Author: Ellen Meiksins Wood
Publisher: Verso
Published: 2005-01-17
Total Pages: 206
ISBN-13: 9781844675180
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWhat does imperialism mean in the absence of colonial conquest and imperial rule?
Author: Andrew Friedman
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2013-08-02
Total Pages: 428
ISBN-13: 0520956680
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe capital of the U.S. Empire after World War II was not a city. It was an American suburb. In this innovative and timely history, Andrew Friedman chronicles how the CIA and other national security institutions created a U.S. imperial home front in the suburbs of Northern Virginia. In this covert capital, the suburban landscape provided a cover for the workings of U.S. imperial power, which shaped domestic suburban life. The Pentagon and the CIA built two of the largest office buildings in the country there during and after the war that anchored a new imperial culture and social world. As the U.S. expanded its power abroad by developing roads, embassies, and villages, its subjects also arrived in the covert capital as real estate agents, homeowners, builders, and landscapers who constructed spaces and living monuments that both nurtured and critiqued postwar U.S. foreign policy. Tracing the relationships among American agents and the migrants from Vietnam, El Salvador, Iran, and elsewhere who settled in the southwestern suburbs of D.C., Friedman tells the story of a place that recasts ideas about U.S. immigration, citizenship, nationalism, global interconnection, and ethical responsibility from the post-WW2 period to the present. Opening a new window onto the intertwined history of the American suburbs and U.S. foreign policy, Covert Capital will also give readers a broad interdisciplinary and often surprising understanding of how U.S. domestic and global histories intersect in many contexts and at many scales. American Crossroads, 37
Author: Yuliya Yurchenko
Publisher: Pluto Press (UK)
Published: 2018
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9780745337388
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn ambitious analysis of contemporary Ukrainian political economy.
Author: Brian Phillips Murphy
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Published: 2015-06-04
Total Pages: 304
ISBN-13: 0812247167
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFocusing on the state of New York, home to the first American banks, utilities, canals, and transportation infrastructure projects, Building the Empire State examines the origins of American capitalism by tracing how and why business corporations were first introduced into the economy of the early republic.
Author: Leo Panitch
Publisher: Verso Books
Published: 2012-10-09
Total Pages: 465
ISBN-13: 1844677427
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Author: Deborah Hopkinson
Publisher: Schwartz & Wade
Published: 2012-11-28
Total Pages: 48
ISBN-13: 0307983218
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor Book and ALA-ALSC Notable Children's Book provides a riveting brick-by-brick account of how one of the most amazing accomplishments in American architecture came to be. It’s 1930 and times are tough for Pop and his son. But look! On the corner of 34th Street and 5th Avenue, a building straight and simple as a pencil is being built in record time. Hundreds of men are leveling, shoveling, hauling. They’re hoisting 60,000 tons of steal, stacking 10 million bricks, eating lunch in the clouds. And when they cut ribbon and the crowds rush in, the boy and his father will be among the first to zoom up to the top of the tallest building in the world and see all of Manhattan spread at their feet.
Author: Quinn Slobodian
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 2020-04-07
Total Pages: 401
ISBN-13: 0674244842
DOWNLOAD EBOOKGeorge Louis Beer Prize Winner Wallace K. Ferguson Prize Finalist A Marginal Revolution Book of the Year “A groundbreaking contribution...Intellectual history at its best.” —Stephen Wertheim, Foreign Affairs Neoliberals hate the state. Or do they? In the first intellectual history of neoliberal globalism, Quinn Slobodian follows a group of thinkers from the ashes of the Habsburg Empire to the creation of the World Trade Organization to show that neoliberalism emerged less to shrink government and abolish regulations than to redeploy them at a global level. It was a project that changed the world, but was also undermined time and again by the relentless change and social injustice that accompanied it. “Slobodian’s lucidly written intellectual history traces the ideas of a group of Western thinkers who sought to create, against a backdrop of anarchy, globally applicable economic rules. Their attempt, it turns out, succeeded all too well.” —Pankaj Mishra, Bloomberg Opinion “Fascinating, innovative...Slobodian has underlined the profound conservatism of the first generation of neoliberals and their fundamental hostility to democracy.” —Adam Tooze, Dissent “The definitive history of neoliberalism as a political project.” —Boston Review
Author: Vivien Green Fryd
Publisher:
Published: 2001
Total Pages: 292
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe subject matter and iconography of much of the art in the U.S. Capitol forms a remarkably coherent program of the early course of North American empire, from discovery and settlement to the national development and westward expansion that necessitated the subjugation of the indigenous peoples. In Art and Empire, Vivien Green Fryd's revealing cultural and political interpretation of the portraits, reliefs, allegories, and historical paintings commissioned for the U.S. Capitol, the reader is given an enhanced appreciation for the racial and ethnic implications of these works. This latest contribution to the United States Capitol Historical Society's Perspectives on the Art and Architectural History of the United States Capitol series provides an affordable and accessible insight into one of our most visited, viewed, and revered national buildings. Professor Fryd demonstrates how the politics of our history is written in stone and painted on the walls of these hallowed halls.
Author: Matthew Brown
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 2009-04-20
Total Pages: 289
ISBN-13: 1444306626
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis volume is an interdisciplinary interrogation of the concept of British 'informal empire' in Latin America. It builds upon recent advances in the historiography of imperialism and studies of the nineteenth-century modern world, most obviously the work of Ann Stoler, Catherine Hall and C.A. Bayly. Combining a comparative perspective with the juxtaposition of political economy, cultural history, gendered and postcolonial approaches, and by proposing and debating alternative explanatory models, the book breathes new life into the flagging concept of 'informal empire'. It illuminates the study of British imperialism, from which Latin America is usually conspicuous only by its absence, and provides a broad and sound basis for interpreting the complex processes of nation-building and state-formation in Latin America. The book includes essays by scholars who have been shaping the debate for several decades, alongside work by a younger generation of researchers keen to re-conceptualise and re-assess the roles of capital, commerce and culture in shaping informal empire.
Author: Çi_dem Kafescio_lu
Publisher: Penn State Press
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 340
ISBN-13: 0271027762
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Studies the reconstruction of Byzantine Constantinople as the capital city of the Ottoman empire following its capture in 1453, delineating the complex interplay of socio-political, architectural, visual, and literary processes that underlay the city's transformation"--Provided by publisher.