The Enchantments of Mammon, Eugene McCarraher
The Enchantments of Mammon, Eugene McCarraher
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

The Enchantments of Mammon
How Capitalism Became the Religion of Modernity

Author: Eugene McCarraher

Narrator: Paul Boehmer

Unabridged: 34 hr 57 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 08/04/2020


Synopsis

If socialists and Wall Street bankers can agree on anything, it is the extreme rationalism of capital. Ignoring the motive force of the spirit, capitalism rejects the awe-inspiring divine for the economics of supply and demand.

Eugene McCarraher challenges this conventional view. Capitalism, he argues, is full of sacrament, whether or not it is acknowledged. Capitalist enchantment first flowered in the fields and factories of England and was brought to America by Puritans and evangelicals whose doctrine made ample room for industry and profit. Later, the corporation was mystically animated with human personhood, to preside over the Fordist endeavor to build a heavenly city of mechanized production and communion. By the twenty-first century, capitalism has become thoroughly enchanted by the neoliberal deification of "the market."

The Enchantments of Mammon looks not to Marx and progressivism but to nineteenth-century Romantics for salvation. The Romantic imagination favors craft, the commons, and sensitivity to natural wonder. It promotes labor that, for the sake of the person, combines reason, creativity, and mutual aid. In this impassioned challenge, McCarraher makes the case that capitalism has hijacked and redirected our intrinsic longing for divinity—and urges us to break its hold on our souls.

About Eugene McCarraher

Eugene McCarraher is associate professor of humanities at Villanova University and the author of Christian Critics: Religion and the Impasse in Modern American Social Thought. He has written for Dissent and the Nation and contributes regularly to Commonweal, the Hedgehog Review, and Raritan. His work on The Enchantments of Mammon was supported by fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Council of Learned Societies.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David

Absolutely amazing. Charles Taylor’s book A Secular Age is a brilliant story of how the western world moved from a premodern age of enchantment to our current secular age. Refuting the commonly told subtraction story (we learned science and got rid of religion), Taylor told a fuller and more nuanced......more

Goodreads review by alex

I went back and forth on this until the fires sweeping across the west coast made it click into place. The world is dying and it’s man’s greatest creation, it’s conquering colossus, that is plunging the knife. Capitalism and it’s cleanest theology yet, neoliberalism, is an energy that is so obviousl......more

Goodreads review by Marks54

The book is premised on an examination of Max Weber’s hypothesis of the growth of disenchantment with the world. In response, the author, Eugene McCarraher, who is a professor at Villanova, undertakes a broad historical survey of the relationship between capitalism and religion since the American Re......more