2,201
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

The whiteness of markets: Anglo-American colonialism, white supremacy and free market rhetoric

ORCID Icon
Pages 662-676 | Accepted 08 Dec 2022, Published online: 28 Dec 2022

References

  • Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537, 1896.
  • Allen, T., 2012 [1994]. Invention of the white race, volume 1: racial oppression and social control. Cambridge, USA: Harvard University Press.
  • Allen, T., 2012 [1997]. Invention of the white race, volume 2: the origin of racial oppression in Anglo-America. Cambridge, USA: Harvard University Press.
  • Banner, S., 2005. How the Indians lost their land: law and power on the frontier. Cambridge, USA: Harvard University Press.
  • Barber, W., 1993 [1988]. Political economy and the academic setting before 1900: an introduction. In: Barber W., ed. Economists and higher learning in the nineteenth century. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 3–14.
  • Bhagat, A., 2022. Governing refugees in raced markets: displacement and disposability from Europe’s frontier to the streets of Paris. Review of International Political Economy, 29 (3), 955–978.
  • Bhambra, G., 2021. Colonial global economy: towards a theoretical reorientation of political economy. Review of International Political Economy, 28 (2), 307–322.
  • Bhandar, B., 2018. Colonial lives of property: law, land, and racial regimes of ownership. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Bonilla-Silva, E., 2017. Racism without racists: color-blind racism and the persistence of racial inequality in America. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
  • Breen, P.H., 2015. The land shall be deluged in blood: a new history of the Nat Turner Revolt. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Brenner, R., 1976. Agrarian class structure and economic development in pre-industrial Europe. Past & Present, 70, 30–75.
  • Brophy, A.L., 2008. Considering William and Mary’s history with slavery: the case of president Thomas Roderick Dew. William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal, 16 (4), 50.
  • Byrd, J., et al., 2018. Predatory value: economies of dispossession and disturbed relationalities. Social Text, 36 (2), 1–18.
  • Clegg, J., 2020. A theory of capitalist slavery. Journal of Historical Sociology, 33 (1), 74–98.
  • Cook-Lynn, E., 1997. Who stole native American studies? Wicazo Sa Review, 12 (1), 9–28.
  • Cooper, T., 1826. Lectures on the elements of political economy. Columbia, SC: Telescope Press.
  • Crenshaw, K., 1989. Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: a black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics. University of Chicago Legal Forum, 1 (8), 139–167.
  • Crenshaw, K., 1998. Color blindness, history, and the law. In: W. Lubiano, ed. The house that race built: original essays by Toni Morrison, Angela Y. Davis, Cornel West, and others. New York: Vintage Books, 458–472.
  • Crenshaw, K.W., et al., 2019. Introduction. In: K.W. Crenshaw, etal, ed. Seeing race again: countering colorblindness across the disciplines. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 1–19.
  • Davis, A.Y., 2019 [1981]. Women, race and class. London: Penguin Books.
  • Dew, T.R., 1829. Lectures on the restrictive system: delivered to the senior political class of William and Mary college. Richmond, VA: Printed by S. Shepherd & co.
  • Dew, T.R., 1832. Review of the debate [on the abolition of slavery] in the Virginia legislature of 1831 and 1832. Richmond, VA: Printed by T. W. White.
  • Douglass, F., 1845. Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass. Boston, MA: The anti-slavery office.
  • Douglass, F., 1855. My bondage and My freedom. New York: Act of Congress.
  • Du Bois, W.E.B., 1998 [1935]. Black reconstruction in America. New York: The Free Press.
  • Dyer, R., 1997. White. London: Routledge.
  • Farzan, A.N., 2018. Sears’s ‘radical’ past: how mail-order catalogues subverted the racial hierarchy of Jim Crow. Washington Post.
  • Finlayson, A., 2012. Rhetoric and the political theory of ideologies. Political Studies, 60 (4), 751–767.
  • Gaffney, M., 1994. Land as a distinctive factor of production. Land and Taxation.
  • Galenson, D.W., 1984. The rise and fall of indentured servitude in the Americas: an economic analysis. The Journal of Economic History, 44 (1), 1–26.
  • Greer, A., 2010. National, transnational, and hypernational historiographies: new France meets early American history. Canadian Historical Review, 91 (4), 695–724.
  • Greer, A., 2014. Chapter 2. Dispossession in a commercial idiom: from Indian deeds to land cession treaties. In: J. Barr and E. Countryman, eds. Contested spaces of early America. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 69–92.
  • Hacker, J.D., 2020. From ‘20. and odd’ to 10 million: the growth of the slave population in the United States. Slavery & Abolition, 41 (4), 840–855.
  • Hamilton, A., 1787. Federalist Paper No. 7. In: The Federalist. The Gideon Edition. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund. Reprint: 2001.
  • Handlin, O., and Handlin, M., 1950. Origins of the southern labor system. The William and Mary Quarterly, 7 (2), 199–222.
  • Hunter, B., and Boyak, C., 2021. 102. Can the Market Combat Racism? [podcast] 17 February. Available from: https://tuttletwins.com/podcast/102-can-the-market-combat-racism/ [Accessed 3 Mar 2022].
  • Jay, J., 1787. Federalist No. 64. In: The Federalist. The Gideon Edition. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund. Reprint: 2001.
  • Jefferson, T., 1776. Original rough draught of the declaration of independence [online]. Jefferson’s “original Rough draught” of the Declaration of Independence. Available from: https://jeffersonpapers.princeton.edu/selected-documents/jefferson%E2%80%99s-%E2%80%9Coriginal-rough-draught%E2%80%9D-declaration-independence [Accessed 11 Feb 2020].
  • Kaplan, J., 2021. Against economy–culture dualism: an argument from raced economies. Feminist Theory, 22 (3), 381–403.
  • Locke, J., 1690. Second treatise of government. London: Awnsham Churchill.
  • Mansfield, S., 1967. Thomas Roderick Dew at William and Mary: ‘A main prop of that venerable institution’. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 75 (4), 429–442.
  • Matory, J.L., 2008. The illusion of isolation: The Gullah/Geechees and the political economy of African culture in the Americas. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 50 (4), 949–980.
  • McCalman, I., 1987. Ultra-radicalism and convivial debating-clubs in London, 1795–1838. The English Historical Review, 102 (403), 309–333.
  • Meyers, R., 2016. Who stole native American studies II: the need for an AIS redux in an age of redskin debate and debacle. Wicazo Sa Review, 31 (1), 132–144.
  • Morgan, E.S., 2003 [1975]. American slavery, American freedom: the ordeal of colonial Virginia. London: W.W. Norton & Co.
  • Obeyesekere, G., 2005. Cannibal talk: the man-eating myth and human sacrifice in the south seas. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Parisot, J., 2019. How America became capitalist: imperial expansion and the conquest of the west. London: Pluto Press.
  • Post, C., 2011. The American road to capitalism: studies in class-structure, economic development and political conflict, 1620–1877. Leiden: BRILL.
  • Roediger, D., 2007 [1991]. The wages of whiteness: class and the making of the American working class. London: Verso.
  • Saull, R., 2018. Racism and far right imaginaries within neo-liberal political economy. New Political Economy, 23 (5), 588–608.
  • Saunt, C., 2015. How were 1.5 billion acres of land so rapidly stolen? | Aeon Essays [online]. Aeon. Available from: https://aeon.co/essays/how-were-1-5-billion-acres-of-land-so-rapidly-stolen [Accessed 8 Dec 2021].
  • Seamster, L., and Ray, V., 2018. Against teleology in the study of race: toward the abolition of the progress paradigm. Sociological Theory, 36 (4), 315–342.
  • Shammas, C., 1978. The rise of the colonial tenant. Reviews in American History, 6 (4), 490–495.
  • Shilliam, R., 2021. Decolonizing politics: an introduction. Cambridge, MA: Polity.
  • Stiverson, G.A., 1977. Poverty in a land of plenty: tenancy in eighteenth-century Maryland. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Tilley, L., 2021. Extractive investibility in historical colonial perspective: the emerging market and its antecedents in Indonesia. Review of International Political Economy, 28 (5), 1099–1118.
  • Tilley, L., and Shilliam, R., 2018. Raced markets: an introduction. New Political Economy, 23 (5), 534–543.
  • Watson, M., 2018a. Crusoe, Friday and the raced market frame of orthodox economics textbooks. New Political Economy, 23 (5), 544–559.
  • Watson, M., 2018b. The market. Newcastle upon Tyne: Agenda Publishing Limited.
  • Whitaker, J., 1993 [1988]. Early flowering in the Old dominion: political economy at the College of William and Mary and the University of Virginia. In: W. Barber, ed. Economists and higher learning in the nineteenth century. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 15–39.
  • Williams, E., 1994 [1944]. Capitalism and slavery. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press.
  • Wolfe, P., 2001. Land, labor, and difference: elementary structures of race. The American Historical Review, 106 (3), 866–905.
  • Wood, E.M., 2016 [2002]. The origin of capitalism: a longer view. London: Verso.
  • WWE, 2022. Sputnik Monroe: Bio | WWE. Available from: https://www.wwe.com/superstars/sputnik-monroe [Accessed 10 Feb 2022].
  • Wynter, S., 2003. Unsettling the coloniality of being/power/truth/freedom: towards the human, after man, its overrepresentation–an argument. CR: The New Centennial Review, 3 (3), 257–337.