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Rethinking Racial Capitalism: Labor, Caste, Dispossession


  • Sheraton Grand Hotel Chicago, IL (map)
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This seminar examines racial capitalism as a global phenomenon hinged on long, connected histories of dispossession and labor across diverse geographies and time periods. We take inspiration from Cedric Robinson’s pioneering Black Marxism, which emphasizes the tendency for capitalism “not to homogenize but to differentiate– to exaggerate regional, subcultural, and dialectical differences into racial ones.” Investigating how capital draws upon internal differences in Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean better attunes us to otherwise obscured dynamics within and across the Global South. This view enables us to conceptualize how pre-colonial hierarchies, relatively autonomous systems of commodity exchange and circulation, and unfree labor regimes both interact with a globalizing capitalist mode of production and generate their own racial ideologies. What histories, archives, literatures, and methods can expand the vocabulary for racial capitalism to account for the specificities of diverse contexts? How do we apprehend the relationship between discourses of race, caste, casta and their articulation with labor and dispossession within the contemporary global capitalist order?


We wish to dialogue between foundational theories of racial capitalism and scholarship that complicates familiar genealogies of capitalism and race. Scholars such as Robinson, W.E.B. DuBois, C.L.R. James, and Eric Williams showed how race and capitalism constitute one another. Recent work across disciplines enlarges this perspective. Lisa Lowe, Shona Jackson, Glen Coulthard, Denise Ferreira da Silva, Paula Chakravartty, and Sumit Guha, among others, rethink political economy as entangled with not only race, but also caste, indigeneity, nationality and gender. This is especially illuminating when juxtaposed against earlier, polarized definitions of race, as an invention of scientific & biological thinking in the Atlantic World, and of caste, as an exceptional religious system in South Asia separate from political economy. In contrast, by exploring overlaps between race and caste, and the prevalence of race-thinking in premodern societies and non-European contexts, newer scholarship demonstrates how these different categories fuel capital accumulation and dispossession on a global scale. We strive to build on these conversations, contributing to da Silva and Chakravartty’s claim that the dispossession of racialized subjects from their land and labor is a central, ongoing feature of global racial capitalism.

  • Friday, March 20, 2020
    Stream D (4:00-5:45pm)Sheraton - Columbus A

    • Epic Novels of Agrarian Change in Peruvian and Bengali Fiction
      Nick Millman, University of Pennsylvania

    • Mestizaje's Foundry: Debt, Race, and Utopian Socialism in Nicolás Pizarro Suárez´s El monedero
      Jaime Hanneken, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

    • Carceral Racializations under Settler Colonial Capitalism
      Jennifer Wang, Middlebury College

    • Extractive Modernity at Large
      Eli Jelly-Schapiro, University of South Carolina

  • Saturday, March 21, 2020
    Stream C (2:00-3:45pm)Sheraton - Columbus B

    • Racial Capitalism and Social Difference in Modern China
      Jeremy Tai, McGill University

    • Afro-Asian Solidarity in Print: Robert F. Williams, Mao's China, and the Formation of an Internationalist Public Sphere
      Zifeng Liu, Cornell University

    • The Production of Living Death Under Racial Capitalism
      Neelofer Qadir, University of North Carolina Greensboro

    • The Settler Cosmopolitics of the South African Gandhi
      Micheal Rumore, The Graduate Center, CUNY

  • Saturday, March 21, 2020
    Stream D (4:00-5:45pm)Sheraton - Columbus B

    • "One of the best schemes possible": Race, Caste, and the "Coolie" in the Caribbean
      Najnin Islam, Colorado College

    • 'Stories Women Carry': Reproducing the Global
      Subhalakshmi Gooptu, University of Massachusetts Amherst

    • 'Like Crabs in a Sack Clambering Over Each Other': Indentured Labor and Slavery in David Dabydeen's The Counting House 
      Amrita Mishra, The University of Texas at Austin

    • Two Paths for the Historical Novel: On the Necropolitical Intimacies of Amitav Ghosh’s Oceanic Fictions
      Avni Sejpal, Villanova University