You might be interested in reading Greg Grandin’s The End of the Myth. It gets into both the history and collective psychology of the frontier and how that creates a vision of capitalism as not evolving, as you put it. Essentially, having an “untapped” frontier always out there meant there was a “release valve” on the American economy and society, always a place where capitalism was in the primordial stage. Thus, the sort of pressures that evolve capitalism to latter stages weren’t present for centuries. Even once the actual frontier ran out, the mentality of it being there persisted, with the assumption that there must be alternative frontiers out there to be settled (the phrase “digital frontier” got bandied about a lot in the 90’s and early aughts to describe the Internet).
this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2024
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chapotraphouse
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thanks, I'll check it out