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Lori Filipek's avatar

Thanks for the thoughtful review! I once commented to you that “each of the people who writes a book has a different perspective, and each perspective makes sense from a certain point of view. But all perspectives are partial (including mine and yours).” In addition, each person who READS a book has a different perspective and a unique take-away from a book. I tend to look at general patterns, rather than details. (I’m a lumper, not a splitter.) When I read Arrighi’s book, what I saw was both a general cyclical pattern and an (exponential) expansion of “the hegemon's world” due to ever increasing technology. But that is what I was looking for. It seems you were looking for something somewhat different.

I’m not a Marxist expert and I was less interested in the details of his M, C, M’, but rather in the general picture he painted, which I interpreted as normal changes due to people growing up and living in different parts of the cycle, which caused them to think and act differently. (See Sir John Glubb’s 1976 article “The Fate of Empires” for a discussion of how cultures and their people tend to evolve similarly over time as an empire evolves: http://people.uncw.edu/kozloffm/glubb.pdf.) We have been in the financialization part of Arrighi’s cycle for some years. Whether we will have a new hegemon or the US will grow out of this stage due to our increasing technology, the global nature of our hegemony, and/or our developing a maturity beyond prior cycles, only time will tell.

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Secret Squirrel's avatar

I enjoy this blog enormously. I'm not an economist, just a political theorists who aspires to basic literacy and I share your taste in economics books so much I'm slightly embarrassed, everything you've picked I've either read or want to read.

RE: Tooze, do you know this lecture he gave in Vienna? He gives a really handy breakdown of the "macrofinancial" thinking that informed *Crashed* and compares it to Arrighi. He's already arguing that cyclical finance-centered theories, even the ones he likes, can't explain the Great Acceleration and he makes an interesting gesture towards Schumpeter: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36bfqHZtSiU

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