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Nations and Capital The Missing Link in Global Expansion 1st Edition

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Full Title

Nations and Capital The Missing Link in Global Expansion 1st Edition

Author(s)

Zlatko Hadžidedić

Edition

1st Edition

ISBN

9781000543247, 9781032159720, 9781003246527, 9781032159706, 9781000543230

Publisher

Routledge

Format

PDF and EPUB

Description

Capitalism survives by adapting. Marx exposed its reliance on exploiting labour to generate profit. Polanyi warned that its hunger to commodify everything—nature, work, and even human bonds—destroys societies, sparking chaos. Yet capitalism endures, mutating through crises. Why? Nations and Capital reveals the missing mechanism: nationalism. Where Marx saw revolution, and Polanyi foresaw self-destruction as capitalism’s endgames, this book uncovers nationalism as the system’s ultimate safeguard. When markets erode trust or class conflict threatens profits, nationalism steps in—manufacturing loyalty, dividing the oppressed, and recasting exploitation as collective destiny. Capitalism doesn’t merely use nationalism; it depends on it to fragment resistance, privatize solidarity, and keep us fighting each other instead of the system devouring us all. When neoliberalism irreversibly ripped society’s fabric, capitalism didn’t abandon nationalism: hyper-capitalism, today’s system of limitless extraction, abandons democracy instead and turns to authoritarian nationalism. This shift isn’t a rupture but a revelation: nationalism was never a phase; it is capitalism’s life support, mutating to sustain accumulation, from colonial empires to digital oligopolies. Why does this matter? Because tomorrow’s crises—global economic collapse, the breakup of international order, pandemics—will be met with nationalism’s toxic embrace unless we confront its role as capitalism’s oxygen. Written from Bosnia and Herzegovina—a periphery where global capital and nationalist oligarchies joined forces to entrench ethnic partition—this theory of nationalism sees what thinkers in capitalism’s core could not: nationalism is not a byproduct of industrial capitalism’s need for labour’s cultural homogeneity (Gellner) or print capitalism’s construction of “imagined communities” (Anderson). It is the lifeblood of a system that cannot survive without converting solidarity into division, belonging into exclusion, and hope into fear. Marx and Polanyi gave us the diagnosis. Nations and Capital completes it: understanding capitalism’s survival requires understanding nationalism as the other side of capitalism’s coin.