The contributors to Colonial Racial Capitalism consider anti-Blackness, human commodification, and slave labor alongside the history of Indigenous dispossession and the uneven development of colonized lands across the globe. They demonstrate the co-constitution and entanglement of slavery and colonialism from the conquest of the New World through industrial capitalism to contemporary financial capitalism. Among other topics, the essays explore the historical suturing of Blackness and Black people to debt, the violence of uranium mining on Indigenous lands in Canada and the Belgian Congo, how municipal property assessment and waste management software encodes and produces racial difference, how Puerto Rican police crackdowns on protestors in 2010 and 2011 drew on decades of policing racially and economically marginalized people, and how historic sites in Los Angeles County narrate the Mexican-American War in ways that occlude the war’s imperialist groundings. The volume’s analytic of colonial racial capitalism opens new frameworks for understanding the persistence of violence, precarity, and inequality in modern society. Contributors. Joanne Barker, Jodi A. Byrd, Lisa Marie Cacho, Michael Dawson, Iyko Day, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Alyosha Goldstein, Cheryl I. Harris, Kimberly Kay Hoang, Brian Jordan Jefferson, Susan Koshy, Marisol LeBrón, Jodi Melamed, Laura Pulido “Throughout the chapters of [ Colonial Racial Capitalism ] the authors demonstrate the numerous ways everyday people have refused to become subsumed by these oppressive relationships, resulting in a work that does not merely ‘recite the horrors’ of a colonial racial capitalism, but offers insights into alternative means of living and relating to one another.”― Kendall Artz , Ethnic and Racial Studies "[T]his volume represents an exciting reworking of anti-capitalist critique as it offers a historical materialist methodology deeply informed by both Black radical and decolonial thought."― Andrew Hamilton , Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association “By centering land as a site of deployment of and resistance to modern power, the pieces in Colonial Racial Capitalism formulate the question of the conditions of the existence of capital that requires an answer exceeding the geographical, philosophical, and racial limits of white Europe. Anyone interested in a serious examination of global capital and in alternatives that do not merely rehearse its constitutive colonial and racial violence must begin by reading this book.” -- Denise Ferreira da Silva, author of ― Toward a Global Idea of Race Susan Koshy is Associate Professor of English and Asian American Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Lisa Marie Cacho is Associate Professor of American Studies at the University of Virginia. Jodi A. Byrd is Associate Professor of Literatures in English at Cornell University. Brian Jordan Jefferson is Associate Professor of Geography and Geographic Information Science at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.