Private Property and the Fear of Social Chaos

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A01=Aidan Beatty
Atlantic World
Author_Aidan Beatty
Category=JPF
Category=KCSA
Category=NH
Cultural History
Edmund Burke
Enclosures
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Intellectual History
John Locke
Karl Marx
Private Property
Silicon Valley
Thatcherism
Whiteness

Product details

  • ISBN 9781526191632
  • Weight: 405g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jun 2025
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is a book about what people imagine it means to live in a world where private property is dominant, and their fears – and sometimes hopes – about living in a future world where private property has disappeared. In the propertied imagination, private property is a fragile thing, an institution beset by terrifying enemies and racialised and gendered mobs: Levellers and Diggers, socialists and anarchists, fervent religious radicals, abolitionists, feminists, and haughty welfare-state bureaucrats. The history of private property is the history of a recurring nightmare that one or another of these groups would storm the castle and take control. That threatened social chaos is the central unifying story of this book.


Private property and the fear of social chaos starts by charting the thinkers who laid the foundations for how we understand private property, including Locke, Burke, Marx and Engels. The book looks at how their ideas have been put into practice in ways that continue to shape the modern world, from Harry Truman’s housing policies and the anti-abolitionist George Fitzhugh to Margaret Thatcher and Elon Musk. Arguing that the spectre of ‘the mob’ has been intimately interconnected with the idea of private property throughout capitalist modernity, the book ambitiously narrates this history from the early colonisation of the Americas to Silicon Valley, and the future of human colonisation in space.

Aidan Beatty teaches in the History Department at Carnegie Mellon University

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