Gerald Horne. The Apocalypse of Settler
Colonialism: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, and Capitalism in Seventeenth-Century
North America and the Caribbean. Monthly Review Press, 2018. 256 pp. ISBN: 9781583676639.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/apocalypse_of_settler_colonialism/
In The
Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism, Gerald Horne once again earns his
reputation as a nuanced transnational historian of race and class. In this, his
thirtieth book, Horne demonstrates that modernity arrived in the seventeenth century
on the three horsemen of the apocalypse: slavery, white supremacy, and
capitalism. Through a focus on English colonial projects, Horne proves these
phenomena to be inseparable and interlocking, rather than, for instance,
separate pillars of a single structure. Horne's deft archival work reveals
rebellion to be a powerful and primary historical force, and clarifies
whiteness as a category of convenience used to quell the vibrant cross-class
and cross-racial revolutions which erupted throughout the seventeenth century--from
England to Jamaica, Barbados to Boston--rebellions that reverberated through the
formation of the United States forward to this day. In Horne's adroit analysis,
seventeenth-century merchant class revolts against the monarchy, long thought
to be paeans to democracy and liberalism, are shown to be inextricable from the violent enslavement of Africans and Native
Americans. For example, Horne shows how the American revolution of 1776,
often understood as a liberal democratic rebellion, was less laudable: a
merchant class of capitalists used the "democratic" spread of white supremacy
to wrest wealth from a divinely ordained monarchy's monopoly on slavery. White
supremacy, as Horne's historical research shows, is a tool of capital
accumulation. Whiteness was used to justify the opening up of slave markets,
the accelerated brutality of colonial and settler colonial genocide and
extraction economies, and the solidification of a categorical Other
underwriting the war logic that continues to define modernity. The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism makes
essential interventions into existing scholarship on the history of racial
formation, the emergence of liberal democracy, and the transnational dynamics
of settler capitalism.
In its attention to the conditions
of crisis within seventeenth-century colonial projects, this book importantly
backdates scholarship documenting the relationships between capital, class, and
racial categories. Horne's text traces a transnational and early history that Nell
Irvin Painter takes up in the centuries that follow in her predominately
American-focused The History of
White People. Horne reveals the seventeenth century as an era where the
preconditions for what Painter details are transnational. He establishes white
supremacy ("often disguised in deceptive Ônon-racial' words") as an essential
handmaiden to mercantile capitalism that crossed oceans, national boundaries,
and political commitments (Horne 135). Merchants invoked white superiority to
argue for their share of slave markets, making leaps from anti-monarchism to
collaboration with royals with a flexibility that allowed an emergent
capitalism to combine with elements of feudalism and slavery, a "blatant power and money grab by merchants
[that] was then dressed in the finery of liberty and freedom" (Horne 172).
Here, Horne joins the likes of Cedric Robinson, whose "racial capitalism" challenges the
Marxist idea that capitalism was a revolutionary negation of feudalism.
Instead, Horne and Robinson agree that a historical continuum of exploitation
dominated by the merchant class who allied with republicanism or monarchism as
it suited their financial and social gains. In some cases, too, this continuum
was embodied in a single figure, as "some aristocrats by lineage became
merchants by currency" (Horne 37). Tracing these continuities, Horne
pays special attention to advancements in military technologies, national and
imperial political dynamics, and the force of venture capital as the material
conditions which allow for this "new kind of aristocracy that is whiteness" (13).
Horne's book offers an early
transnational history for work on the paradoxes of liberal democracy. Horne hones in on the Glorious Revolution of
1688--"Not So Glorious for Africans and the Indigenous"--as
emblematic of the convenient use of liberal democracy to cover merchant
capitalists in the dawning of the Africa and Native North America's apocalypse
(Horne 164). Horne catalogues the historical beginnings of what Chandan Reddy
calls Freedom With Violence but
argues "It would be an error to ascribe fiendish barbarity to Western
Europeans alone, even settlers" (Horne 59). He instead attributes the apocalypse
to the systems of settler capitalism that recruited from across Europe
and Britain
and had impacts across the globe (Horne 59). Indeed, "the bloody process of human bondage" which included
nearly 13 million Africans and possibly as many as 5 million Native Americans,
was "the driving and animating force" of the apocalypse that made both
democracy possible and the executors of this apocalypse unbelievably wealthy (Horne
9).
Horne's text complements studies
taking up more recent paradoxes of liberalism, adding transnational historical
depth to studies of our contemporary moment. Horne's research fills out the colonial
history informing work such as the Economies of
Dispossession explored in a 2018 issue of Social Text, Lisa Lowe's Intimacies of Four Continents,
Wendy Brown's Walled States, Waning
Sovereignty, David Theo Goldberg's Sites
of Race, and Grace Kyungwon Hong's
The Ruptures of American Capital.
Horne's book also provides an essential antecedent to texts that take up these
paradoxes in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, such as Timothy Powell's Ruthless Democracy, Brenda Bhandar's The
Colonial Lives of Property, Laura Stohler's Race and the Education of Desire, and
Patrick Wolfe's Traces of History. The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism is an essential colonial pre-history
for Aileen Moreton-Robinson's The White
Possessive, Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz's An
Indigenous People's History of the United States, and David Stannard's
The
American Holocaust. Moreover, Horne documents the
seventeenth century's "racializing rationalization of inhumanity" in complement
to Jamaican social theorist Sylvia Wynter's essential insights that categories
of the "human" were crucial to the creation of racial Others that accompanied conquest
even before Columbus with the landing of the Portuguese on the shores of
western Africa (Horne 8).
Horne's focus on rebellions like King
Phillip's war, which was enflamed by colonists selling Indigenous peoples into
slavery, connects Indigenous and African political movements and details their
power in the face of right-wing populist demagogues like Francis Bacon (Horne 145).
Crucially, just as Nick Estes' Our History
is the Future reveals Indigenous struggles to be a powerful historical
agent, Horne's attention to the power of seventeenth-century political
movements, especially African and Native rebellions, makes clear that
transnational solidarity is as old as colonialism and remains the greatest
opponent of transnational settler colonialism and imperialism.
Horne's
text enhances recent work in Indigenous, Black,
and ethnic studies that explores the
"apocalypse," rebellion, and settler colonialism as a set
of apocalypse-inducing technologies aimed at dispossession that communities of
color have been outlasting for centuries (la paperson
10). Potawatomi environmental philosopher
Kyle Whyte has shown the ways Native communities in the United States and
Canada already live "what our ancestors would have likely characterized as a
dystopian future" (Horne 207). Whyte's words resonate with scholars across disciplines such as Grace Dillon (English),
Cutcha Risling Baldy (Native American Studies), Zoe
Todd (Anthropology), Lawrence Gross (Race and Ethnic Studies), Sidner Larson (American Indian Studies), and
other Indigenous writers who emphasize that Indigenous peoples are experienced
survivors of the past and ongoing apocalypse of settler colonial capitalism.
Indigenous Futurisms, a term coined by Grace Dillon, was inspired by
Afrofuturism which builds
on Mark Sinker's claim that the "Apocalypse already happened: that (in Public
Enemy's phrase) Armageddon been in effect" (Sinker). Horne's study offers a vital historical archive for these recent
anti-colonial futurisms.
Horne's vibrant language and
anticolonial methodology tracing seventeenth-century apocalypse adds urgency to
his argument that revolution today is not just possible, but long overdue. For
instance, his historical narrative relates the rebellions in 1640s Barbados,
Antigua, Virginia, Maryland, and Bermuda to our own delayed revolutionary
moment, making clear that the
apocalypse was not merely a game of the elites, but, rather, perpetrated by
those who could rapidly class-climb by consenting to a solidarity based on
racial capitalism that has yet to disappear. To make these connections across
decades, centuries, and geographies, Horne moves forward and backward in time
in ways that can be dizzying for those more comfortable with linear chronology.
However, Horne's deliberate interruption of progressive time may be a
methodological aspect of his argument. The
Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism disrupts the forward movement of what
Mark Rifkin calls "settler time" which normalizes colonial histories of
modernity, and refuses the backward revisionism that Claire Colebrook reads in
Western apocalyptic narratives (Rifkin). In this interruption, Horne's
methodology closely aligns with Nick Estes' explorations of the apocalyptic prophecies informing
the Standing Rock movement. Estes reminds readers that
"Indigenous resistance draws from a long history, projecting itself backward
and forward in time" (Estes 18). Similarly, Alexis Pauline Gumbs examines this
forward-backward movement in terms of "black feminist time travel," a
time-space continuum where those seeking social justice today draw on the
strength of people like Harriet Tubman, who, too, used her imagination of the
freedom that many experience now as a source of strength to survive and free
others. These Indigenous and Black studies scholars detail continuance through
and beyond The Apocalypse of Settler
Colonialism, vital scholarship that builds decolonial futures into the
historical recognition so assiduously archived in Horne's research. Horne's research
and powerful conclusion gain even more force when understood in conversation with
this growing body of research. The
Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism also
draws attention to the ways apocalypse has been used to justify and reinvigorate these systems of exploitation, as scholars like
Betsy Hartmann, Joanna Zylinska, Andrew McMurry, Eddie
Yuen, Larry Lohman, and Frederick Buell show and the recent issue of ASAP/Journal explores. Though Horne does
not make these literary connections explicit, his brief mention of today's
alarming reprise of fascism offers scholars an opportunity to connect his work
to literary, Black, and Indigenous studies scholarship regarding contemporary
invocations of the apocalypse such as ecofascist responses to climate change.
The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism provokes, but does not plot, the correlations between
the rebellions and climate crisis of the 1600s and the ways that relates to our
own contemporary climate chaos and social justice movements. Horne does gesture
to those connections, drawing Geoffrey Parker's work on seventeenth-century
climate change into relation with the piratical character of capitalism, anti-Blackness,
Indigenous genocide, and settler colonialism. Horne gifts scholars the space to
extend these exigent connections from his seventeenth century work even farther
across time and space. The
Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism is essential reading for any scholar,
student, or civic intellectual interested in transnational American studies,
global economic systems, or the contemporary parallel rise of fascism and the
apocalypses of climate change.
April
Anson, University of Pennsylvania
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