© 2020 David McNally
Published in 2020 by
Haymarket Books
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773-583-7884
ISBN: 978-1-64259-206-1
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This book was published with the generous support of Lannan Foundation and Wallace Action Fund.
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For Helen, John, and Marilyn
And in memory of Colin Barker, Joyce and Ken Ferguson, and Ellen Meiksins Wood
CONTENTS
1.“Droves I Took Alive and Auctioned Off as Slaves”: War, Slavery, and Ancient Markets
2.The Law of the Body: Money and the State
4.Blood in the Water: Colonialism, Slavery, and the Birth of Modern Money
5.Imperial War, Imperial Money: The Dollar’s Rise to Global Dominance
Foreword and Acknowledgments
This book has been many years in the making. It originated in efforts to make sense of world money as a critical concept for the understanding of modern capitalism. As so often happens, this interest coincided with others—including the questions of slavery and the rise of capitalism—in ways that took me down unanticipated paths. Eventually, I found myself toiling at the crossroads of money and slavery in the ancient Greco-Roman world. And from there, I kept crossing history’s bridges to later historical complexes of war, slavery, finance, and empire—from early modern Britain to the US empire today. The result, I hope, is a unique historical interpretation of money and power in the making of our world.
The first presentation of some of these arguments came in my Deutscher Memorial Prize Lecture at the 2013 Historical Materialism Conference at the University of London. A revised version of that lecture appeared the next year as “The Blood of the Commonwealth: War, the State and the Making of World-Money,” in Historical Materialism (vol. 22, no. 2). I thank the journal’s editors and the conference organizers for their support.
As work on the book proceeded, I benefited from insightful feedback on several chapters from Colin Barker, Sue Ferguson, Holly Lewis, Geoff McCormack, and Colin Mooers. I extend my warmest thanks and appreciation to all of them. I especially remember, with sadness and great affection, the encouragement I received from Colin Barker, who expressed great excitement about this project and insisted on reading some of its chapters while battling the cancer that took him from us. Colin was a true friend, a wonderful, generous socialist, and an incisive radical thinker.
Work on this book was regularly halted as we lost others along the way. My loving partner, Sue Ferguson, lost both of her parents, Joyce and Ken, in 2016 and 2017, respectively. They are remembered with love and affection.
My dear friend and former teacher Ellen Meiksins Wood passed in 2016. Outside of asking Ellen one small question concerning my research on ancient Greece, I did not have the benefit of her sharp and discerning opinions on the arguments I have made here. Ellen might have differed with me on many points in the analysis that follows. But she would have been pleased, I think, that I have honored her injunction to always do the necessary historical investigation before pronouncing oneself on matters like these.
While I was working on this book, I moved from Toronto’s York University to the University of Houston. Big thanks are due to my colleagues and students at York, where I first launched this project. My warm reception in the Department of History in Houston has been a true joy, for which I am grateful to all my colleagues there. For their kindness, generosity, and support, special thanks are due to Donna Butler, Philip Howard, Tom O’Brien, Raul Ramos, Linda Reed, Paul Scott, Abdel Razzaq Takriti, and Cihan Yüksel Muslu. Their support has meant the world to me as I make a new home in Houston. I am truly thrilled that Blood and Money will roll off the presses as my first book as a member of the UH Department of History.
I also want to recognize the inspiring activists of the Convict Leasing and Labor Project (CLLP) in Sugar Land, Texas, with whom I have been privileged to work since my arrival in Houston. I will say something more about them in my next book, which will be devoted to the relationship between slavery and capitalism. That question forms much of the backdrop to their efforts to preserve and memorialize the remains of ninety-five African American convict laborers found in 2018 at the site of the former Imperial Prison Farm in Sugar Land. I particularly want to acknowledge the decades of work in this area by CLLP founder Reginald Moore, the keeper of the flame, and to recognize the dedication to this cause of Sam Collins, Barbara Jones, Naomi Carrier Mitchell, and Liz Austin Peterson.
At the heart of my life is the love and support of Sue Ferguson and of our amazing children, Adam, Sam, and Liam. Once again, Sue has been with me on this journey every step of the way, while toiling away at a book of her own. As pleased as I am to be sending Blood and Money to Haymarket Books, I truly cannot wait for Sue’s book launch. As for our boys, they continue to be endless sources of joy, love, laughter, and celebration. I thank them and hug them all.
In this day and age especially, authors ought to be immensely appreciative to editors and publishers dedicated to the process of writing and producing high-quality books. I cannot say enough about the wonderful folks at Haymarket Books. I particularly want to thank John McDonald and Anthony Arnove for their support and encouragement, my manuscript editor, Ashley Smith, for his valuable and insightful comments, and copy editor, Sam Smith, for their meticulous attention to the manuscript.
I am extremely fortunate