New Books in Critical Theory

David McNally, "Slavery and Capitalism: A New Marxist History" (U California Press, 2025)

Sep 3, 2025
David McNally, Cullen Distinguished Professor of History and Business at the University of Houston, dives deep into his groundbreaking work on slavery and capitalism. He argues that slavery was intrinsically linked to capitalist production, presenting enslaved labor as a form of collective resistance. McNally critiques traditional views of individual freedom, advocating for a communal understanding. He also introduces the concept of the 'chattel proletariat,' urging a reevaluation of labor history to highlight the agency of enslaved workers.
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INSIGHT

Freedom As A Collective Project

  • Freedom for enslaved people is a collective, social project rather than an individual possession.
  • David McNally argues that undoing slavery requires communal action because no individual can dismantle systemic bondage alone.
INSIGHT

A Forgotten Marxist Tradition

  • A Black Marxist tradition treated New World slavery as capitalist rather than feudal.
  • McNally revives thinkers like C.L.R. James, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Sylvia Wynter to show plantations were capitalist commodity producers.
INSIGHT

Plantation Workers As Proletariat

  • C.L.R. James saw Haitian plantation workers as closer to a modern proletariat than most contemporaneous workers.
  • McNally builds on that claim to show the collective, commodity-producing character of plantation labor.
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