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  • Volume 1: Commerce and Compromise, 1820–1850
  • John Ashworth, University of East Anglia
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
January 2010
Print publication year:
1996
Online ISBN:
9780511572319

Book description

The Civil War should be seen as America's 'bourgeois revolution'. So argues Dr John Ashworth in this novel reinterpretation, from a Marxist perspective, of American political and economic development in the forty years before the Civil War. This book, the first of a two-volume treatment of slavery, capitalism and politics, locates the political struggles of the antebellum period in the international context of the dismantling of unfree labor systems. With its sequel, the volume will demonstrate that the conflict resulted from differences between capitalist and slave modes of production. With a careful synthesis of existing scholarship on the economics of slavery, the origins of abolitionism, the proslavery argument and the second party system, Ashworth maintains that the origins of the American Civil War are best understood in terms derived from Marxism.

Reviews

‘ … a significant contribution to our critical understanding of the structure of the ante-bellum Southern USA … well written and researched an would be of general interest to anyone wishing to become acquainted with issues of the Ante-bellum South‘.

Source: Capital & Class

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