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Revision as of 15:00, 27 March 2026
This repository curates and investigates artifacts of capitalism in the pre-modern world.
We define an artifact of capitalism as any object or text that reveals how pre-modern subjects thought about, engaged with, or responded to their own economic life. These artifacts might be husbandry manuals, guild rules, personal letters, legal documents, or sermons—but they also include tools like sextants, ships, and calculators. We’re interested in anything that sheds light on the workings of early modern capitalism.
But what do we mean by capitalism? That’s one of the central questions this project explores. Rather than starting with a fixed definition, we begin with the artifacts themselves—gathering, comparing, and questioning. From there, our understanding of capitalism will emerge, shaped by the voices who experienced early forms of our modern economic system. This project, then, is not a search for the “origin” of capitalism, but an effort to document the experience of early modern economic life. It is a phenomenological endeavor rather than an epistemological, teleological, definitional, or theoretical project. In fact, we want to leave open the possibility that whatever is captured in these documents may not be described as capitalism at all. What emerges may not be an early or embryonic form of capitalism but a historically specific economic formation that defies modern terminology and challenges modern assumptions about how economic life can be organized.
As an open-source project, this repository invites anyone to share artifacts that document the economic experience of pre-modern subjects. Just as we don’t want to offer a fixed definition of capitalism, we also don’t want to dictate when modernity arises. That said, this project focuses on early modern English culture and is run by early modern English scholars, so we will be privileging artifacts from 1500–1700 found on the English archipelago. However, we are also aware that economic activities often transcend geographical and political boundaries, so we are also interested in artifacts that capture global economic experiences.
To submit an abstract, click on the submissions tab.