01002nam0 22002653i 450 VAN0026192520240806101506.933978-88-15-26472-520230725d2009 |0itac50 baitaIT|||| |||||ˆL'‰assedio di ViennaJohn StoyeBolognaIl Mulino2009315 p., [8] carte di tav.ill.22 cm001VAN000481822001 Storica paperbacks210 BolognaIl Mulino.82BolognaVANL000003StoyeJohnVANV216434214005Il MulinoeditoreVANV107886ITSOL20240906RICABIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI LETTERE E BENI CULTURALIIT-CE0103VAN07VAN00261925BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI LETTERE E BENI CULTURALI07CONS Ve 2176 07UBL3098 20230725 Assedio di Vienna3403113UNICAMPANIA03438nam 22005775 450 991099278630332120250330112840.09783031840029303184002X10.1007/978-3-031-84002-9(CKB)38166476200041(DE-He213)978-3-031-84002-9(MiAaPQ)EBC31979889(Au-PeEL)EBL31979889(OCoLC)1513129103(EXLCZ)993816647620004120250330d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Unfinished History of the Indebted Nation-State /by Jonathan Hall1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2025.1 online resource (VIII, 76 p. 1 illus.) 9783031840012 3031840011 Chapter 1: The pre-capitalist double-bind and its persistence -- Chapter 2: Nation-state formation and antisemitism: a history of duplicity -- Chapter 3: Purification and Paranoia: the legacy of early modern ethnic cleansing -- Chapter 4: Imperial legality versus its adventuring warlords -- Chapter 5: From the retrospective “transition debate” to the revolutionary “transitional demand”.This book traces the genesis of the indebtedness of the nation-state in the West, arguing that it is a phenomenon which preceded the emergence of capitalism. Even prior to the emergence of the capitalist mode of production, the ruling class of feudal landowners in the West were dependent on credit, and had to repay the loans provided by their international creditors. Those monetary loans were unavoidable, both for the defence of the emergent territorial state against its rivals and for its expansion in the struggle against them. However autonomous the early Western nation-states may appear to have been, in reality they were all dependent on the transnational creditors of the time, while the latter in their turn depended on them for the extraction of surplus value from the geographically widening circle of their subject populations. In the modern world of international capitalism, the various nationalisms are still inseparable from the international framework of financial institutions which struggle to sustain the global regime for the perpetual extraction of surplus value. Jonathan Hall is an Honorary Research Fellow at Sheffield University, UK and a former Lecturer in Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies at the University of Hong Kong.Intellectual lifeHistoryEconomic historyWorld historyIntellectual HistoryEconomic HistoryWorld History, Global and Transnational HistoryIntellectual lifeHistory.Economic history.World history.Intellectual History.Economic History.World History, Global and Transnational History.001.09Hall Jonathanauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut176608MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910992786303321The Unfinished History of the Indebted Nation-State4349060UNINA