Available Formats
Private Property and the Fear of Social Chaos
By (Author) Aidan Beatty
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
21st March 2023
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History
Capitalism
330.17
Hardback
344
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 21mm
549g
A history of whiteness, masculinity, and the intellectual history of private property from the seventeenth century onwards in the anglophone Atlantic world. Private property and the fear of social chaos studies what people imagine it means to live in a world where private property is dominant and their fears (and sometimes hopes) about living in a future world where private property has disappeared.
This is a close reading of some of the dominant theorists of private property in the Anglophone world Locke, Burke, Marx and Engels, Harry Truman, Thatcher as well as more obscure figures like the pro-slavery ideologue George Fitzhugh. Taken as a whole, all of these disparate figures show how modern conceptions of private property always have racial and gendered logics and a fear of the mob operating within them.
'Beatty is rising as an important young historian able to speak to large issues with authority, evidence, and nuance. This book is an elegant and economical study of the social origins of modern liberalism and conservatism and Marxism. It is a highly original work with unexpected but well-connected elements.'
David Roediger, author of The Sinking Middle Class
Aidan Beatty teaches at the Honors College of the University of Pittsburgh