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Nothing about endless capitalist growth is normal.
Across thousands of years of human history, most cultures have placed explicit social and moral restrictions on economic growth, with charging interest scorned as benefiting from another's hardship and profit-making as divisive. So how did interest rates, monetary gains, and return on investment come to rule our modern world?
Though most economic histories tell this story as one of overcoming superstition in favor of social progress, Losing Interest explains how the concept of interest had to be continuously rehabilitated over six
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Produktbeschreibung
Nothing about endless capitalist growth is normal.
Across thousands of years of human history, most cultures have placed explicit social and moral restrictions on economic growth, with charging interest scorned as benefiting from another's hardship and profit-making as divisive. So how did interest rates, monetary gains, and return on investment come to rule our modern world?

Though most economic histories tell this story as one of overcoming superstition in favor of social progress, Losing Interest explains how the concept of interest had to be continuously rehabilitated over six centuries of European colonial expansion, transforming profit from a mortal sin into a business model. From early Medici innovations in banking to the development of insurance schemes in the trans-Atlantic slave trade, our current economic system was built on legal and financial tools that abstract capital from the ongoing reality of deception, theft, and mass murder at its core.

With wit and lyricism, anthropologist cott W. Schwartz makes a clear, commonsense appeal for our shared wellbeing against capitalism's nonsensical demand for widespread suffering to produce the mounting wealth of the few. In the spirit of David Graeber, Thomas Piketty, and Kohei Saito, Losing Interest serves as a prequel to contemporary degrowth literature, illuminating the history and mechanics of how interest has risen to take from the poor and give to the rich.


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Autorenporträt
Scott W. Schwartz is an Adjunct Associate Professor of Anthropology at the City University of New York researching how exploitation and injustice become normal. He is also the author of An Archaeology of Temperature: Numerical Materials in the Capitalized Landscape (Routledge, 2022).