Moments of Capital

Undertaken at the interface of critical theory and world literature, Moments of Capital sets out to grasp the unity and heterogeneity of global capital in the postcolonial present. Eli Jelly-Schapiro argues that global capital is composed of three synchronous moments: primitive accumulation, expanded reproduction, and the "synthetic dispossession" facilitated by financialization and privatization. These moments correspond to distinct economic and political forms, and distinct strands of theory and fiction.
Moments of Capital integrates various intellectual traditions—from multiple trajectories of Marxist thought, to Weberian inquiries into the "spirit" of capitalism, to anticolonial accounts of racial depredation—to reveal the concurrent interrelation of the three moments of capital. The book's literary readings, meanwhile, make vivid the uneven texture and experience of capitalist modernity at large. Analyzing formally and thematically diverse novels—works by Fiston Mwanza Mujila, Marlon James, Jennifer Egan, Eugene Lim, Rafael Chirbes, Neel Mukherjee, Rachel Kushner, and others—Jelly-Schapiro evinces the different patterns of feeling and consciousness that register, and hypothesize a way beyond, the contradictions of capital. This book develops a new conceptual key for the mapping of contemporary theory, world literature, and global capital itself.
"Jelly-Schapiro's thoughtful, rigorous scholarship gives us new ways of thinking about (seemingly) vastly different texts in relation to the global life of capitalism. A formidable achievement."—Upamanyu Pablo Mukherjee, Oxford University
"With compelling force... Jelly-Schapiro sets out to establish the theoretical, historical, and political grounds for connecting disparate works of fiction in a single critical approach or methodology, thus correcting the Eurocentric bent of world literature in much the same way as 'world theory' sets out to correct the Eurocentrism of certain strands of historical materialism."—Jacob Soule, Novel
"With a lively precision.... Jelly-Schapiro provides a wide-ranging account of the development of the [three moments of capital]. The treatment of each of them... amounts to a more thoroughgoing world theory: they articulate the vicissitudes of capital on the world stage and force us to think through the unequal yet interrelated dynamics of our own world-system and its evolution."—Joel Evans, American Literary History