for satisfaction that most working class people have, without being revolutionary. It would be dangerous to lose sight of this. The historical archaeology of capitalism as advocated in this book is nothing new; we have all heard it all before. Whether we accept it or not, this is how the field must be defined. Attempts to construct a de-politicized defini-tion, whether framed as the intersection of material culture and text, or based on the role of individual agency, is doomed to fail. The final question has to ultimately be whether our research will support capitalism or critique it. I suggest we "just do it." LouAnn is an Assistant Professor in th
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Review of: Beyond Consumer Capitalism: Media and the Limits to Imagination, by Justin Lewis. Cambrid...
Professor Martin Upchurch reviews 'Zombie Capitalism: Global Crisis and the Relevance of Marx', by C...
The paper is an extensive critique of a book by P.L. Berger, entitled The Capitalist Revolution and ...
Book Review: Cultural Resource Laws and Practices: An Introductory Guide by Thomas F. King, 1998, Al...
This book will be very useful for any social scientist wanting to know why capitalism as an economic...
The financial crisis caused many to reconsider the desirability and feasibility of capitalism. In Wh...
Cognitive Capitalism argues the political economy born with Adam Smith no longer offers us the possi...
What is the role of the media and cultural industries in late capitalism? In Beyond Con...
Book Review: Historical Archaeologies of Capitalism, edited by Mark P. Leone and Parker B. Potter, J...
Book review of: Capital and ideology / by Thomas Piketty, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2020 ...
Elizabeth Cotton is disappointed by a book that seems to have lost contact with the world around it,...
Robert E. Babe’s premise in this book is to cross the gaps between two disciplines and to anticipate...
First published online: 09 June 2021When, early in Capitalism as Civilisation: A History of Internat...
FROM THE REVIEW: "Capitalism is the 'natural reality' of the day: we live in and with its beauty and...
As Capital & Class says on its title page, the CSE is not as narrowly focussed as its name might...
Review of: Beyond Consumer Capitalism: Media and the Limits to Imagination, by Justin Lewis. Cambrid...
Professor Martin Upchurch reviews 'Zombie Capitalism: Global Crisis and the Relevance of Marx', by C...
The paper is an extensive critique of a book by P.L. Berger, entitled The Capitalist Revolution and ...