Cheapness and (labor-)power: The role of early modern Brazilian sugar plantations in the racializing Capitalocene

被引:13
作者
Eichen, Joshua R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Dept Geog Soc & Environm, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
关键词
Race; Anthropocene; Capitalocene; world-ecology; the state; plantations; SLAVE-TRADE; CLIMATE; ANTHROPOCENE; AMERICA; HISTORY; END;
D O I
10.1177/0263775818798035
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This essay looks at the historical geography of sugar plantations in Northeast Brazil during the 16th- and 17th-centuries to critique the spatio-temporality of the discourse of the Anthropocene. I argue that sugar plantations were key places in early systemic cycles of capital accumulation with their grim calculus of cheap labor-power and acceptable deaths. Sugar plantations were simultaneously prototypical racializing state actors and part of the emergent relations of capital changing the climate. With their rationalized, time-disciplined labor for processing cane into sugar, plantations were not only fundamentally proto-industrial sites, but also one of capital's laboratories of modernity. They were primordial sites of proletarianization, of spatio-temporal patterns that repopulated the Americas and central in the production not of the Anthropocene but of the racializing Capitalocene.
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页码:35 / 52
页数:18
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