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Articles

The Capitalocene, Part I: on the nature and origins of our ecological crisis

Pages 594-630
Published online: 17 Mar 2017
 
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This essay, in two parts, argues for the centrality of historical thinking in coming to grips with capitalism’s planetary crises of the twenty-first century. Against the Anthropocene’s shallow historicization, I argue for the Capitalocene, understood as a system of power, profit and re/production in the web of life. In Part I, I pursue two arguments. First, I situate the Anthropocene discourse within Green Thought’s uneasy relationship to the Human/Nature binary, and its reluctance to consider human organizations – like capitalism – as part of nature. Next, I highlight the Anthropocene’s dominant periodization, which meets up with a longstanding environmentalist argument about the Industrial Revolution as the origin of ecological crisis. This ignores early capitalism’s environment-making revolution, greater than any watershed since the rise of agriculture and the first cities. While there is no question that environmental change accelerated sharply after 1850, and especially after 1945, it seems equally fruitless to explain these transformations without identifying how they fit into patterns of power, capital and nature established four centuries earlier.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to Diana C. Gildea, and also to Gennaro Avallone, Henry Bernstein, Jay Bolthouse, Neil Brenner, Holly Jean Buck, Christopher Cox, Sharae Deckard, Joshua Eichen, Samuel Fassbinder, Kyle Gibson, Daniel Hartley, Gerry Kearns, Emanuele Leonardi, Ben Marley, Phil McMichael, Tobias Meneley, Michael Niblett, Roberto José Ortiz, Christian Parenti, Raj Patel, Andy Pragacz, Stephen Shapiro, Jeremy Vetter, Richard Walker and Tony Weis for conversations and correspondence on the themes explored in this essay.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Jason W. Moore

Jason W. Moore teaches world history and world-ecology at Binghamton University, where he is associate professor of sociology and research fellow at the Fernand Braudel Center. He is author of Capitalism in the Web of Life (Verso, 2015) and editor of Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, History, and the Crisis of Capitalism (PM Press, 2016). He writes frequently on the history of capitalism, environmental history and social theory. Moore is presently completing Ecology and the Rise of Capitalism, an environmental history of the rise of capitalism, and, with Raj Patel, Seven Cheap Things: A World-Ecological Manifesto – both with the University of California Press. He is coordinator of the World-Ecology Research Network.

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