From primitive accumulation to entangled accumulation: Decentring Marxist Theory of capitalist expansion

European Journal of Social Theory 23 (2):146-164 (2020)
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Abstract

During the last few decades, the concept of primitive accumulation (ursprüngliche Akkumulation) introduced by Karl Marx and expanded by Rosa Luxemburg has been revived and improved. Accordingly, scholars have used this framework not to characterize a past moment in the history of capitalism, but to grasp the continuous process of coupling and uncoupling geographical and social spheres in the capital accumulation in different fields: financialization, the care economy, green grabbing, the sharing economy, real estate bubbles, data mining, etc. Despite the quality and productivity of these debates, they are still focused on authors and phenomena observed in the Global North, ignoring a long tradition of similar discussions developed especially in Latin America. The article seeks to decentre these debates by taking seriously into account approaches which address primitive accumulation from the perspective of (post)colonial and (post)slave societies. It coins the concept entangled accumulation to emphasize the interdependencies between practices of exploitation and expropriation, wage and slave labour, state power and illegal violence, and capitalist and non-capitalist economies, which have shaped capital accumulation throughout history.

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References found in this work

Entangled Modernities.Göran Therborn - 2003 - European Journal of Social Theory 6 (3):293-305.
World Accumulation, 1492-1789.Andre Gunder Frank - 1979 - Science and Society 43 (4):490-492.

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