4.3 Article

Seeing and Not-seeing Like a Political Economist: The Historicity of Contemporary Political Economy and its Blind Spots

Journal

NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 217-228

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13563467.2020.1841143

Keywords

Blind spots; political economy; international political economy; history

Funding

  1. Leverhulme Trust [VP2-2017-019]
  2. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada [435-2020-0077]

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The aim of this Special Issue is to draw attention to and critically evaluate the historical assumptions in contemporary political economy, in order to contribute to a more analytical and reflexive understanding of the potential biases and omissions in the field. The overarching goal is to identify key blind spots and understand how scholars have missed or misconstrued important dynamics defining contemporary capitalism and social inequalities.
Contemporary political economy is predicated on widely shared ideas and assumptions, some explicit but many implicit, about the past. Our aim in this Special Issue is to draw attention to, and to assess critically, these historical assumptions. In doing so, we hope to contribute to a political economy that is more attentive to the analytic assumptions on which it is premised, more aware of the potential oversights, biases, and omissions they contain, and more reflexive about the potential costs of these blind spots. This is an Introduction to one of two Special Issues that are being published simultaneously by New Political Economy and Review of International Political Economy reflecting on blind spots in international political economy. Together, these Special Issues seek to identify the key blind spots in the field and to make sense of how many scholars missed or misconstrued important dynamics that define contemporary capitalism and the other systems and sources of social inequality that characterise our present. This particular Special Issue pursues this goal by looking backwards, to the history of political economy and at the ways in which we have come to tell that history, in order to understand how we got to the present moment.

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