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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
October 2025
Print publication year:
2025
Online ISBN:
9781009644488

Book description

In this radical reinterpretation of the Financial Revolution, Craig Muldrew redefines our understanding of capitalism as a socially constructed set of institutions and beliefs. Financial institutions, including the Bank of England and the stock market, were just one piece of the puzzle. Alongside institutional developments, changes in local credit networks involving better accounting, paper notes and increased mortgaging were even more important. Muldrew argues that, before a society can become capitalist, most of its members have to have some engagement with 'capital' as a thing – a form of stored intangible financial value. He shows how previous oral interpersonal credit was transformed into capital through the use of accounting and circulating paper currency, socially supported by changing ideas about the self which stressed individual savings and responsibility. It was only through changes throughout society that the framework for a concept like capitalism could exist and make sense.

Reviews

‘This book explores the multiple economic, institutional, moral and social components that enabled capitalism to penetrate down to the village elite and to produce profound social upheavals. Through rich analysis carried out close to the various actors, this book fundamentally renews our knowledge of the birth and development of capitalism in Britain.’

Laurence Fontaine - author of The Moral Economy: Poverty, Credit, and Trust in Early Modern Europe

‘Craig Muldrew’s first book, Economy of Obligation, now recognized widely as a classic, fundamentally changed our understanding of the early modern culture of credit. The Capitalist Self will have a similarly transformative effect, this time on how scholars think about the culture of capital. Here, Muldrew powerfully combines social history, intellectual history, and economic history to produce a fresh new take on the Financial Revolution and the socialization of capital. This new view explores institutions and beliefs, often with a focus on rural conditions, throughout Britain, as well as its North American colonies. This book will spark discussion, controversy, and rethinking. It is a brilliant book!’

Carl Wennerlind - author of Casualties of Credit: The English Financial Revolution, 1620–1720

‘In this challengingly original study, Muldrew brings extraordinarily rich erudition to bear in redefining Britain’s nascent capitalist system, illuminating not only emergent economic institutions and practices, but also the ethical shifts that validated them and their impact on social relations and identities.’

Keith Wrightson - author of Earthly Necessities: Economic Lives in Early Modern Britain

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