NY Times, Dec. 30 2014
Capitalism, as Woven Through Cotton
‘Empire of Cotton,’ by Sven Beckert
By Thomas Bender

EMPIRE OF COTTON
A Global History
By Sven Beckert
Illustrated. 615 pages. Alfred A. Knopf. $35.

After a quarter-century of tightly focused studies, historians are 
addressing extended periods of time and the global dimensions of 
history. As Thomas Piketty did in “Capital in the 21st Century,” his 
excellent recent study of wealth and inequality, Sven Beckert takes the 
long view in “Empire of Cotton: A Global History.” Mr. Beckert’s book is 
more broadly framed and more readable, but at its heart, as in Mr. 
Piketty’s book, is inequality.

Instead of statistical distributions of wealth, Mr. Beckert’s focus is 
on planters and enslaved workers, manufacturers and wage laborers, the 
center of the British Empire and colonies and, later, developing 
nations. What both books bring out are the structural sources of 
disempowerment and inequality.

Mr. Beckert’s masterly narrative of cotton production within the 
framework of state power and capitalism shows how much has been missed 
in studies focused on the vulnerable (slaves, women and the like) 
without incorporating the structural advantages of the powerful. Deeply 
researched and eminently readable, “Empire of Cotton” gives new insight 
into the relentless expansion of global capitalism.

Cotton has been cultivated and valued since ancient times, and Mr. 
Beckert, a professor of American history at Harvard, begins there. His 
story, though, effectively commences in the 16th century when, as both 
Adam Smith and Karl Marx insisted, the voyages of discovery revealed 
that the oceans, rather than being barriers, were actually highways 
giving birth to modern capitalism. Smith hailed this development, but he 
pointed out that while it brought “enjoyments” and “industry” to Europe, 
it entailed “dreadful misfortunes” in Asia and the Americas.

In Mr. Beckert’s view, the cotton revolution was partly the fortuitous 
product of a sequence of inventions — flying shuttle (1733), spinning 
jenny (1764), water frame (1769) and Samuel Crompton’s spinning mule (1779).

In the 1780s, cloth manufacture was powered by nonhuman forms of energy 
for the first time, and Britain became the first industrial nation. Yet 
invention was only part of the story. Empire was central; it enabled the 
accumulation of capital for rapid expansion and controlled markets, and 
it ensured a supply of cotton. “Slavery and the expropriation of native 
lands,” Mr. Beckert writes, “fueled by European capital, combined to 
feed raw materials relentlessly into Europe’s core industry.”

Soil exhaustion from tobacco agriculture in the American South combined 
with Eli Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin (1793), prompting a shift 
there to cotton cultivation. The South became the principal source of 
cotton for British mills.

Until 1865 this production depended on slave labor, and it required a 
vast increase in the importation of enslaved Africans. One-third of all 
slaves imported into the United States came between 1793 and 1808, when 
the further importation was banned by Congress at the earliest date 
allowed by the Constitution.

But this is not entirely a Southern story. Northerners provided the 
insurance, brokerage, financing and shipping, making New York the 
financial capital of the Americas.

By the middle of the 19th century, Manchester, England, became the 
center of cotton manufacture. At first unable to match the quality of 
Asian production, Manchester’s machines and the city’s labor force — 
women and children as well as men — gradually caught up.

But there were human costs in the factories as well as in the fields. To 
make this point, Mr. Beckert quotes Alexis de Tocqueville, who was 
shocked on a visit to Manchester: “Here humanity attains its most 
complete development and its most brutish; here civilization works its 
miracles, and civilized man is turned back almost into a savage.”

Mr. Beckert sees the hand of the state in both the accomplishments and 
shameful sides of industrial capitalism. He repeatedly attributes the 
darker side of his story to “war capitalism.” But his usage lacks 
definition and can seem arbitrary. Empire, another phrase that runs 
prominently through the book, provides the actual framework for this 
capitalist enterprise. In some cases it is formal empire, but it is also 
British command of capital and trade routes, what historians call free 
trade imperialism. Thus I would put it the other way around: Empire was 
the foundation of cotton capitalism, with warfare being one of its 
instruments.

The 19th-century story Mr. Beckert tells is global in scale. The 
American South was the greatest single source of cotton, yet was just 
one of many. Egyptian cotton was the finest, but cotton production also 
soared in India, Brazil, Africa and China. Not all American cotton went 
to Manchester. Some went North, and young women from New England farms, 
later replaced by immigrants, tended the spindles and looms in a massive 
factory complex in Lowell, Mass., and elsewhere. Throughout the century, 
and around the world, millions of people were turned into proletarians.

Mr. Beckert’s research was done in archives on every continent, and his 
skill in pulling together the elements of the global world of cotton is 
an astonishing achievement. With graceful prose and a clear and 
compelling argument, he not only charts the expansion of cotton 
capitalism, with its bankers, brokers and manufacturing magnates, but 
also addresses the conditions of enslaved workers in the fields and wage 
workers in the factories.

With the American Civil War and the end of slavery, the labor question 
became urgent. Southern planters turned to sharecropping and tenant 
farming rather than a wage system. The formerly enslaved agricultural 
workers, eager for autonomy, preferred this arrangement to one with a 
former master as boss. This solution to the labor question became the 
global standard. It shifted considerable risk from capital to labor.

Crop failures, whether caused by weather or insect infestation, were the 
burden of the tenant farmer, not the planter. Moreover, the financial 
structure kept agricultural workers chronically in debt. Everywhere the 
state favored capital at the expense of labor, notably vagrancy laws and 
crop lien protocols. Large landowners and merchants dominated.

The development of cotton manufacture represented a knowledge transfer 
from Asia to Europe. Today North Atlantic capital, managed by giant and 
powerful retailers like Walmart or Carrefour, exploits the workers of 
Asia and the Global South. It sets the terms of production and price, 
encouraging brutal exploitation of labor that amounts to a brutal race 
to the bottom. In global cities bidding on commodity exchanges, trade in 
derivatives and bets on price movements transform labor and cotton into 
an abstraction. At a time when many believe in unregulated capitalism, 
this history may suggest reconsidering that faith.


Thomas Bender is a professor of humanities and history at New York 
University and the author of “A Nation Among Nations: America’s Place in 
World History.”
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