One of the upcoming featured articles in the ISO’s International 
Socialist Review is titled “The poverty of Political Marxism”. Written 
by Alexander Anievas and Kerem Nisancioglu, it will obviously be a 
polemic directed against the academic trend dedicated to applying the 
“Brenner thesis” to various historical events, including the American 
Civil War.

Briefly summarized, the Brenner thesis claims that capitalism developed 
originally in the British countryside in the 17th century as a result of 
the introduction of tenant farming that put a premium on competition. 
Once it took hold in Britain, it diffused to the rest of the world.

Furthermore, Political Marxism has a fairly strict definition of 
capitalism. Without free labor, it simply does not exist. So, in the 
case of the Southern slave states, you had something called 
“precapitalism”, according to Charles Post. Needless to say, this 
category was not very prevalent in a Marxism that continued to stress 
the need for identifying social relations more exactly. Wouldn’t there 
be a need to distinguish 19th century plantations in Alabama from slave 
labor during Nero’s age?

full: 
http://louisproyect.org/2014/10/12/the-tide-turns-against-political-marxism/
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