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Andrew McKevitt on Gun Capitalism

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

Release Date: 10/01/2024

Rudi Batzell on Racialized Working-Class Politics in the U.S. and British Empires show art Rudi Batzell on Racialized Working-Class Politics in the U.S. and British Empires

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

This month's episode offers a fresh perspective on an old debate. Jettisoning outdated modes of analysis that emphasize race vs. class, guest Rudi Batzell illuminates the materialist underpinnings of racialized working-class politics in the U.S. and British empires. Employing a transnational approach, Batzell shows, for example, how land reform in Ireland helped set the British labor movement on a trajectory towards more inclusive unionism, while, in the U.S., northern industrialists' ability to recruit landless African Americans from the U.S. south undermined working-class solidarity in the...

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Leigh Claire La Berge on Why Capitalism Might Be A Joke show art Leigh Claire La Berge on Why Capitalism Might Be A Joke

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

If you work at a so-called laptop job, there are moments every day when your work feels silly, pointless, absurd, even fake. What if you wrote an entire book that tried to inhabit and analyze that very feeling? Leigh Claire LaBerge’s new book—which is part memoir, part history, with a heavy dash of dark comedy and a sprinkling of Marx—attempts to do exactly that. Drawing on her time working inside of a corporate conglomerate, LaBerge alternatively revels in and eviscerates the inanity of day-to-day white collar life. Late capitalism, she shows, might just be one long joke. The question...

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Bench Ansfield on Arson-for-Profit, Insurance Brownlining, and the Bronx show art Bench Ansfield on Arson-for-Profit, Insurance Brownlining, and the Bronx

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

Arson - which frequently involves the destruction of property - and business are not typically thought to be compatible. Indeed, there is a whole industry - the insurance industry - whose stated business is the mitigation of risk, including the risk of fire. Over the course of the late 1960s and early 1970s, however, fire insurance and fire prevention became untethered. This, combined with other developments, created the circumstances for arson to become profitable for some landlords. In this month's episode, guest Bench Ansfield details the local, national, and international circumstances...

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Kendra Boyd on Black Business and Racial Capitalism during the Great Migration show art Kendra Boyd on Black Business and Racial Capitalism during the Great Migration

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

Take a moment and picture the average person who came North during the Great Migration. Chances are good that you conjured someone who was African-American and working-class, bound for a city in search of a job, say, in a factory or in domestic service.  But as Kendra Boyd’s new book, Freedom Enterprise, reveals, the Great Migration also saw entrepreneurs moving to the urban North in search of opportunity. Once they arrived in places like Detroit, these businesspeople had to navigate a fraught landscape that was profoundly structured by race and racism.   Today's episode tackles...

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Trish Kahle on Energy Citizenship and Coal-Fired Democracy in the 20th Century U.S. show art Trish Kahle on Energy Citizenship and Coal-Fired Democracy in the 20th Century U.S.

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

What do energy consumers owe energy producers? What does it mean to be a citizen in a coal-fired democracy? In this month's episode, guest Trish Kahle reckons with the costs and benefits of coal from the perspective of American coal miners in Appalachia. Starting at the turn of the 20th century, Kahle outlines miners efforts to articulate and, later, revise a coal-fired social contract, one capable of delivering them the benefits of citizenship. Thus, Kahle shows how miners, throughout the 20th century, endeavored to leverage their position as energy producers to make claims on the U.S....

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Ian Kumekawa on Globalization As Told Through One Ship show art Ian Kumekawa on Globalization As Told Through One Ship

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

How do you write the history of something as abstract, as placeless, and as vast as the globalization that has remade our world over the past several decades?  If you’re Ian Kumekawa, you make those immaterial forces concrete by telling the story of one object: a hulking 94-meter-long steel barge he calls “The Vessel.”  From housing for oil roughnecks in the North Sea, to a barracks for British soldiers in the Falklands, to a jail docked on a Manhattan pier, the Vessel reveals how the murky world of offshore capitalism is in fact embodied in tangible things. It always involves...

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Koji Hirata on Steel, Industrialization, and Chinese Socialism show art Koji Hirata on Steel, Industrialization, and Chinese Socialism

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

This month's episode looks at the history of Chinese industrialization by focusing on Anshan Iron and Steel Works or Angang, located in Manchuria. Long portrayed as the quintessential model of Mao-era socialist industrialization, Angang, as Koji Hirata shows, was, in many ways, built on the material and ideological foundations laid by imperial Japan and nationalist China. Moving forward in time, Hirata analyzes Angang’s role in the making of socialist China, including revealing the relativley understudied political tensions that existed within China's largest state-owned enterprise (SOE)...

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LIVE! @ BHC 2025 show art LIVE! @ BHC 2025

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

It's now been over a decade since the New York Times declared that the history of capitalism was in full swing at American universities. This podcast also just celebrated its 10 year anniversary. With those milestones in mind, we wanted to take the temperature of the very folks driving the field forward into new and exciting directions. To do that, your co-hosts hit the road, interviewing attendees at the 2025 Business History Conference in Atlanta. Listen to find out what's on the mind of some of the leading historians in our field.

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Justene Hill Edwards on the Rise and Betrayal of the Freedman's Bank show art Justene Hill Edwards on the Rise and Betrayal of the Freedman's Bank

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

In this month's episode Justene Hill Edwards leads listeners on a deep dive into the rise and fall of the Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, also known as the Freedman's Bank. Among the topics explored are the bank's relationship to the similarly named Freedman's Bureau, the ways the bank’s administrators worked to gain African Americans’ trust, and, notably, how these same administrators betrayed African Americans’ trust by squandering, and, at times, outright stealing their savings to fuel their own risky ventures with longterm consequences for the racial wealth gap and African...

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Erik Baker on the Entrepreneurial Century show art Erik Baker on the Entrepreneurial Century

Who Makes Cents?: A History of Capitalism Podcast

Back in high school, my social studies teacher—who was, of course, also the football coach—told my class that entrepreneurs were the heroes of American history. If we enjoyed a dynamic economy and good jobs, it was all thanks to their genius for innovation and risk-taking. And if we wanted to get ahead, he said, we’d need to foster the same sort of entrepreneurial spirit in ourselves. You are probably rolling your eyes right now. I certainly remember doing the same back in 10th grade. But Erik Baker’s new book, Make Your Own Job How the Entrepreneurial Work Ethic Exhausted America,...

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More Episodes

450 million. According to our best estimates, that’s how many guns there are in the United States. To put that in perspective: if you gave a firearm to every single person in the nation—including babies and young children—you’d still have at least 100 million guns left over.

Why did we amass such a large stockpile of guns? How did the US become an outlier among nations when it came to civilian gun ownership?

On this month’s episode, Andrew McKevitt reveals the history of what he calls “gun capitalism” in the decades after World War II. He helps us see how the exploding firearms market was related to broader currents: from the rise of mass consumerism, to Cold War anti-communism, to grassroots social movements for consumer regulation. Is there any way to stem the seemingly limitless accumulation of guns in the United States? Take a listen and find out.