Table of contents

  • : Canada, Critique and Crisis
  • : Canada’s Experience Through the Global Slump
  • : Crisis, the Circuit of Capital and State Intervention
  • : Wages Through the Crisis Period
  • : The Hidden Agenda of Austerity
  • : Left Solitudes and the Wilting of the Political
  • : References
  • : Index

Description

In The Servant State, McCormack and Workman explore Canada’s experience through the “age of austerity” and highlight how this experience has been shaped by the exigencies of capitalist development and the catalyzing role of the Canadian state. The analytical standpoint is not that of the oppressed per se, but rather that of capitalism as a whole. The struggle against contemporary excess and horror, they argue, must be framed with reference to the immuring tendencies of the capitalist order of things.

Reviews

“This book is a game-changer. There is simply nothing else that even comes close to it in terms of theoretical sophistication and empirical detail. The Servant State is meticulously documented and systematically theorized. It deserves to be on every reading list in the field for many years to come.” — David McNally, author of Global Slump

“… the authors give us the most powerful, original, and compelling analysis of Canadian capitalism that we have had for decades. With the publication of The Servant State, all serious students of political economy will be obliged to sit up and pay attention. This book is a game-changer. There is simply nothing else that even comes close to it in terms of theoretical sophistication and empirical detail. The Servant State is meticulously documented and systematically theorized. It deserves to be on every reading list in the field for many years to come.”

- David McNally, author of Global Slump