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  JOURNAL OF WORLD-SYSTEMS RESEARCH 
 

 

 

How to Read Capitalism in the Web of Life12 
Towards a World-Historical Materialism in the Web of Life  
 
Jason W. Moore 

Binghamton University 
jwmoore@binghamton.edu     

 

 

 

Rufus: Mankind got it all wrong by takin’ a good idea 

and building a belief structure out of it.  

Bethany: So you’re saying that having beliefs is a 

bad thing?  

Rufus: I just think it’s better to have an idea. You can 

change an idea; changing a belief is trickier. People 

die for it, people kill for it. 

—Dogma (Kevin Smith, dir., 1999) 

 

How many proletarians can dance on the head of a pin?  

 
1 Preface to the Japanese edition of Capitalism in the Web of Life. Special thanks for discussions on these themes to 

John Peter Antonacci, Gennaro Avallone, Kushariyaningsih C. Boediono, Neil Brenner, Terry Burke, Kenyon 

Cavender, Joshua Eichen, Andrej Grubacic, Margaretha Haughwout, Justin McBrien, Christian Parenti, Marija 

Radovanovic, Fathun Karib Satrio, Marcie Smith Parenti, Richard Walker, and especially Diana C. Gildea and 

Malcolm W. Moore. 

2 Updated from original publication.  

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Vol. 1 |  DOI 10.5195/JWSR.1 

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http://upress.pitt.edu/
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
mailto:jwmoore@binghamton.edu


 

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 It’s an absurd question. But in its flight from history, the question embodies the anti-historical 

bias of too much of today’s environmentalist and Marxist thought. Disconnected from world 

history, many Marxists, and not only Marxists, have succumbed to the bourgeois illusion that 

theoretical problems may be adequately confronted on theoretical terrain. A critique of this illusion 

was central to Capitalism in the Web of Life (Moore 2015, hereafter Web of Life). The problem of 

capitalism, understood as a world-ecology of power, profit, and life, could only be addressed 

through world history. To be clear, this was not an abstract world history but one that drew 

inspiration from The German Ideology, Marx and Engels’ classic statement of world-historical 

materialism ([1846] 2010). The opening lines of this classic statement are so habitually ignored—

even by Marxists!—that I wish to underline them here. A revolutionary and dialectical materialism 

begins with (and returns to) 

 
the physical organisation of [“living human”] individuals and their consequent 
relation to the rest of nature. Of course, we cannot here go either into the actual 
physical nature of man, or into the natural conditions in which man finds himself—
geological, oro-hydrographical, climatic and so on. All historical writing must set 
out from these natural bases and their modification in the course of history through 
the action of men (Marx and Engels 2010: 31, emphases added). 
 

“We cannot here go either into” questions of the web of life and its “modification in the course of 

history through the action of men.” But, as groundbreaking scholars like John Bellamy Foster 

(2000) and Paul Burkett (1999) have demonstrated, this was precisely historical materialism’s line 

of march. Indeed, just a few pages after the above-quoted lines, Marx and Engels extend the insight 

in ways that animated Web of Life’s interpretive trajectory. Through the entangled histories of the 

family and class society, they emphasize, “the production of life, both of one’s own in labour and 

of fresh life in procreation, now appears as a twofold relation: on the one hand as a natural, on 

the other as a social relation” (2010: 41, emphasis added). This twofold relation—Web of Life’s 

dialectical heart—insists that class society, and capitalism specifically, is a metabolism of 

“reciprocal codetermination” through which human social relations, from the body to the 

biosphere, are interpenetrated with the totality of the web of life (Lewontin and Levins 1997: 96). 

To say that “Man’s physical and spiritual life is linked to nature means simply that nature is linked 

to itself, for man is a part of nature” (Marx and Engels [1844] 1975: 275-276).  

 Man? Nature? The words are themselves dialectically reformulated—against bourgeois 

conceptions of these as things-in-themselves—in Marx’s dialectical naturalism. Let me stress that 

Marx’s dialectical naturalism is also a dialectical humanism. (How much virtual ink we might save 

with this elementary dialectical recognition.) Here is, from the outset, a critique of Man and Nature 

thinking, explicitly rejected in The German Ideology. The problem with the idealists, the Young 

Hegelians, was their “the polar opposition of man and nature” (Marx and Engels 2010: 482). 

Transcending such polar oppositions, Marx and Engels point to the historical emergence of the 

“universality of man” which “appears in practice precisely in the universality which makes all 

nature his inorganic body.” Universality, in their hands, has nothing to do with “Western 

Universalism” (Moore forthcoming). Rather, it is a philosophical abbreviation for capitalism’s 



 

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world-historical tendencies. On the one hand, we find a capitalist “universality” as a “world-

historical… empirically verifiable” movement—a tendency that “makes all nature… [the] 

inorganic body” of capital (Marx and Engels 2010: 51; Marx and Engels 1975: 275). On the other, 

its dialectical counter-tendency and potential negation: communism. This is not a “state of affairs” 

but the “real movement…  [of] the proletariat, [which] can only exist world-historically… directly 

linked up with world history” (Marx and Engels 2010: 49). Communism becomes “the real 

movement which abolishes the present state of things,” allowing the “associated producers” (and 

reproducers!) to “govern the human metabolism with nature in a rational way” (Marx and Engels 

2010: 49; Marx 1981: 959). 

 All of which animates the method of world-historical investigation fundamental to Web of 

Life and the wider world-ecology conversation.3 To recapitulate: the specificity of human social 

relations is foregrounded through its metabolic relations with and within webs of life, one in which 

human work is itself a “natural force.” The dialectical implication of this method is 

straightforward. Just as human work involves a dialectical transformation—in acting “upon 

external nature… [she] changes it, and so simultaneously changes [her] own nature” (Marx 1977: 

283, emphases added)—so class society emerges by acting upon external natures, and in so doing 

changes its own nature. Modes of re/production, I other words, emerge through webs of life, and 

acquire their distinctive properties through such environment-making—a process in which class 

society is a product as well as a producer of webs of life. Web of Life’s charge was not to assert 

this point theoretically—which had after all been done—but rather to take the methodological 

implications of the dialectical imagination as a guiding thread for world-historical reconstruction 

(see esp. Moore 2017a).  

 Surprisingly, these arguments elicited a ferocious—and sectarian—response. Bellamy Foster 

turned the full force of Monthly Review, once a beacon of creative and heterodox Marxism, against 

Web of Life. He valorized whispering campaigns that aimed to intimidate—largely 

unsuccessfully—younger scholars. Andreas Malm, from a starkly different Marxist tendency (and 

one historically at odds with Monthly Review’s anti-imperialist Marxism), quickly joined the 

onslaught. Others would reproduce their claims, apparently untroubled by reading the text itself. 

Foster’s tendentious reading, completely devoid of any comradely appreciation, violated every 

rule of reading Marx that he taught me: above all, attentiveness to levels of abstraction, recognizing 

the rich totality of dialectical tendencies and counter-tendencies, taking special care that one not 

mistake Marx’s immanent critique of capitalist value relations as an endorsement, avoiding the 

conflation of methodological statements for theory, identifying the movement from general to 

determinate abstractions, and much beyond. Suffice it to say that Bellamy Foster’s list was careful 

and detailed when it came to reading Marx. No matter. Enemies must be destroyed, their arguments 

 
3 For some recent outstanding contributions to the world-ecology conversation, see Antonacci 2021; Boscov-Ellen 

2021; Brenner 2020; Campbell, Niblett and Oloff 2021; Dixon 2021; Eichen 2020; Ferrando et al. 2021; Gibson 2021; 

Jakes 2020; Mateos 2021; Molinero Gerbeau, et al, eds., 2021a, 2021; Ortiz 2020; Otter 2020; Scown 2020. Several 

hundred texts in the world-ecology conversation can be found here: https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/World-

Ecology. 

https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/World-Ecology
https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/World-Ecology


 

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completely obliterated – even if the enemies did not actually make the arguments in question. On 

offer from Foster has been a long and frankly dishonest set of claims about my arguments. In most 

instances—especially on questions of the specificity and centrality of class relations, of the law of 

value, of metabolism—these non-critiques have attributed to me views that are the very positions 

I’ve criticized. Among the most strident and fanciful claims, we find such fantastic assertions as 

the following: I don’t believe the web of life exists, and therefore I am an idealist and a “social 

constructionist”; I don’t believe that human organization is distinctive within the web of life, and 

therefore I am a monist; I don’t believe in dialectics and instead insist on a “flat ontology” that 

adopts Bruno Latour’s hybrid method; I believe that value is “everything” and therefore adhere to 

an economic reductionism that adopts the standpoint of neoclassical economics (e.g. Foster 2016; 

Malm 2018). In so doing, I have abandoned Marx, supported the climate deniers and become an 

enemy of socialism. 

 And how shall I respond? That I do not in fact beat my wife? That I am not a neoliberal? I 

will underscore that this is a mode of sectarian critique long favored by Monthly Review under 

Foster’s leadership. (It is, I would note, a clear departure from the non-sectarian legacy of Paul M. 

Sweezy and Harry Magdoff.) Such is the spirit of comradely debate that dominates the once-great 

Monthly Review, now converted into a de facto propaganda sheet for the Party of Metabolic Rift.  

 Curiously, the core of Monthly Review’s critique holds that I am an idealist and a 

constructivist. How this gibes with literally hundreds of fine-grained empirical references to 

geobiological landscape and climate change is never really explained. Presumably the alternative 

is a historical materialism in which the web of life matters. But… there seems to be little interest 

in engaging Web of Life on the terrain of capitalism’s world history and its metabolisms of power, 

profit and re/production—which is, after all, the book’s focus. One reason for this might well be, 

in Foster’s case, that my world-historical assessment of capitalist origins and development 

essentially flows from the anti-imperialist historical thesis associated with Monthly Review. Of 

course there are differences between the figures, but Web of Life fits squarely within the broad 

anti-imperialist world histories of Magdoff (1978), Wallerstein (1974), Arrighi (1994), Frank 

(1967), and yes, Foster (1994)—all frequent contributors to the once-mighty socialist journal.  

 The result is a failure to engage the world-historical questions that might shed light on the 

struggle for a Biotarian socialism in the era of the planetary inferno (Moore 2021a). Instead the 

world has been treated to a kind of clickbait Marxism in which hot takes and surficial reading takes 

precedence over a real intellectual debate. The problem of course is not who disagrees with whom, 

but the absence of a comradely mode of debate and synthesis that might help us move towards a 

more radically honest, and historically-grounded, assessment of planetary crisis—the very issue 

that dominates Web of Life, which begins and ends, let me emphasize, with the climate crisis and 

planetary justice.  

 It’s worth noting that the non-critiques recapitulate, intellectually, the world left’s most 

destructive sectarian tendencies over the past century. This is not only uncharitable and 

uncomradely; it is specifically destructive of the intellectual resources necessary to wage and win 

the worldwide class struggle in the climate crisis. Sadly, for the past century or so, a significant 



 

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tendency within Marxist thought converted ideas into beliefs, and then assigned political positions 

on the basis of interpretive differences. Marxism is not alone in this respect; but here the tendency 

towards sectarianism—the linear translation of interpretive differences into divergences of 

political principle—has been especially pronounced.  

 For Malm and others, I am a “monist” who denies human distinctiveness in the web of life. 

Here is an expressive instance of breathtaking sloppiness, justified by a belief structure that 

prioritizes radical posturing over generative intellectual debate. It bears noting that I use the word 

monist precisely once in the book. Even then, I make clear that the word monism is deployed in a 

relational and dialectical fashion. Indeed, the whole discussion is an extension Foster-ally 

Burkett’s thinking on relational holism (1999). I use Marx’s distinctions on the matter as a guiding 

thread, privileging “the practical relations of everyday life between man and man, and man and 

nature” within the long-run development of class society (Marx 1977: 173). This is such a basic 

premise of Marx and Engels’s historical materialism that I had to rub my eyes in disbelief as these 

Marxists ignored Marxism’s crucial philosophical insights – preferring instead the real abstractions 

of Man and Nature in excommunicating me from the True Faith. (Indeed, as Michael Kleinod 

[2020] has shown, behind the flurry of Malm’s revolutionary posturing on this matter is a 

reluctance to deploy historical materialism’s basic methodological principles!)  

 My philosophical and theoretical position is impossible to miss and stated explicitly in the 

first pages of the Introduction. I begin Web of Life by warning of the dangers of an undifferentiated, 

“Green holism,” including poststructuralist theory as well as Latourian actor-network thinking. In 

its place, I argue for a “perspective [that] allows for the multiplication of questions that turn on the 

oikeios: the creative, generative, and multi-layered relation of species and environment” (Moore 

2015: 4). The argument here specifically joins three luminaries of Foster’s eco-socialism: Paul 

Burkett’s groundbreaking work on the relational holism of Marx’s value theory (1999), and the 

dialectical biology of Richard Levins and Richard Lewontin (1985). Nor do I stop there. I insist 

on the specific and ongoing historical-geographical distinctiveness of human social relations with 

and within webs of life. “To say that humans are a part of nature is to highlight the specificity of 

humanity within the web of life—its specific forms of sociality, its capacities for collective 

memory and symbolic production, and much more” (Moore 2015: 6). So much for undialectical 

(post)humanisms and naturalisms! 

 

I am not a Marxist? Non-Critiques and the Flight from World History 

Having lived through a barrage of intellectual smears since the publication of Capitalism in the 

Web of Life, I now appreciate some of Marx’s exasperation with the French Workers Party. By the 

late 1870s, Marx denounced the latter’s “revolutionary phrase-mongering.” If this is Marxism, he 

wrote, “what is certain is that I myself am not a Marxist” (Marx and Guesde 1880). Another 

certainty: Marx’s priority was not to reproduce a high priesthood of the True Marxism, but to 

advance a revolutionary praxis informed by the most radical and ruthlessly honest assessment of 

capitalism and class society in world history. A historical materialism that relegates the history of 



 

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capitalism to a secondary concern necessarily resorts to “revolutionary phrase-mongering.” This 

is precisely what we have seen in the fictitious critiques of Foster, Malm, and other eco-socialists. 

It substitutes well-turned polemical phrases for historical interpretation: the assessment of key 

turning points within, and patterns of, class society over the longue durée. 

 This world-historical emphasis was well-known to the critics. This makes its erasure all the 

more curious. This argument about world-historical turning points and patterns is introduced at the 

beginning of Capitalism in the Web of Life—and had been developed in preliminary form through 

a long series of (occasionally influential) essays stretching back nearly two decades (e.g. Moore 

2000a; 2000b; 2003a; 2003b; 2010a; 2010b; 2011a; 2011b). Surveying poststructuralist and 

Marxist theory, I observe that, for all their insights, these tendencies have not “directly challenged 

the dualist framing of world history. For those concerned about the earth, its people, and the web 

of life, the great patterns and processes of modern world history have remained firmly encaged 

within the prison house of the Cartesian binary. No theoretical critique will open the cage” (Moore 

2015: 5).  

 Although Web of Life is often regarded as work of theory, it does not perform that work on 

the terrain of theory, but rather directly engages with capitalism’s turning points and 

developmental patterns in the web of life. In contrast to most work in social and political theory, 

every major conceptual and theoretical statement is specified through world-historical facts, 

understood as the “developing tendencies of history” (Lukács 1971: 181). Pivotal moments in the 

text include 1492 and the “long” sixteenth century; British-led industrialization between 1780 and 

1830; the emergence and consolidation of neoliberal capitalism after 1971. All are in service to 

making sense of—to quote Sweezy (1953)—the “present as history.” That world-historical present 

is, of course, the climate crisis, understood as the outcome of class struggle and also the new socio-

ecological terrain of the planetary class struggle (Moore 2021b; 2021c). Drawing on Arrighi 

(1994) and Wallerstein (1974), I elaborate a concretely periodized history of phases of capitalist 

development in the web of life, integrating the historical geographies of imperialism, environmental 

change, science, class formations, and capital accumulation.   

 The non-critics have applied their belief structures in the ways that dogmatic formulations 

must: they are self-referencing and refuse to engage alternative ideas on their own terms. 

Specifically, Foster and Malm decline to engage two of Web of Life’s premises: the question of 

world history and the problem of real abstraction. This is not an accidental oversight. It is an 

instance of their belief structures overriding a critically honest assessment of the text. Real 

abstraction appears two dozen times in the text. (I have elaborated my approach further in 

successive essays since 2015: see Moore 2017a; 2017b; 2017c; 2017d; 2018; 2021d.) World 

history, as we have seen, is everywhere in Web of Life (and in everything that I’ve ever written), 

its centrality emphasized from the outset: “Without a world-historical reconstruction, the critique 

of Nature/Society dualism will remain theoretical when it needs to be methodological and 

historical” (Moore 2015: 14).  

 No matter. The eco-socialists are completely unconcerned with world history when it deviates 

from their thought-abstractions. (Forgetting, somehow, that dialectics flows through variation, not 



 

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in spite it.) No matter, even though the eco-socialists drape themselves in the vestments of the One 

True Faith, disregarding—as fundamentalists always do—heterodox insights within their own 

sacred texts. (Such is the corrosive power of belief structures upon dialectical thinking.) In the eco-

socialist flight from world history, “they forget,” as Marx and Engels warned in The German 

Ideology, “that they… are opposing nothing but phrases to [other] phrases, and that they are in no 

way combating the real existing world when they are combating solely the phrases of this world” 

(Marx and Engels 2010: 30). Such an approach, Marx and Engels warned, risks sharing “the 

illusions of [their] epoch” (Marx and Engels 2010: 55).  

 Of modernity’s illusions, none is so powerful—and none more fundamental to the imperialist 

bourgeoisie’s belief structures—than Man and Nature (Moore 2021e). I have written these words 

in the uppercase because they are not merely words; they are instruments of bourgeois rule. I call 

them ruling abstractions, and they are the ideological building blocks of capitalism’s structures of 

domination: Prometheanism (Man over Nature), racism (White over Non-White), sexism (Man 

over Woman) (Moore 2019; 2020; 2021d). The history of capitalism and its long history of 

entwined genocide and ecocide, beginning in 1492, is more than a “material” history of devastated 

environments, mass graves, and profit-making opportunities created by empires and seized by 

capitalists. It is a history functionally enabled by ideological models specifically designed to allow 

empires and bourgeoisies to manage planetary life in the interests of endless accumulation.  

 The binary of Man and Nature is, in other words, the fundamental operating code for the 

imperial bourgeoisie’s strategy of planetary management—premised from the beginning, long 

before Descartes came along, on the separation of “thinking” and “working.” In Man and Nature, 

Man is an ideological claim. It signifies the bourgeoisie’s “over-representation” of itself, 

specifically embedded in successive Civilizing Projects, from the Spaniards’ Requerimiento 

(1513) to Truman’s Point Four declaration (1949) (Wynter 2003). In the most practical ways, these 

Projects designated the peoples of colonial and semi-colonial words as lazy, savage, barbaric, and 

otherwise un-Christian, Un-Civilized, Un-Developed. These Projects designated the planet’s 

“savage” peoples—along with forests, minerals and soils—as Nature (Patel and Moore 2017). 

 Pause for a moment to reflect on the geocultures of domination in the modern world: racism 

and sexism above all. Racism and sexism emerged, in their modern forms, out of the great crisis 

of the long seventeenth century. The language associated with modern domination—especially but 

not only in relation to racism and sexism—is the language of bourgeois naturalism. Although it 

matured during the era of Thomas Malthus (c. 1780-1820), its roots are found two centuries earlier, 

during an unprecedented crisis of capitalism. In this era—and all that followed—the geocultures 

of racism and sexism relied upon this thoroughly modern cosmology: of Civilized and Savage. 

Women, in Federici’s apt turn of phrase (2004: 100), became the “savages of Europe” (and not 

only Europe). Africans, indigenous peoples in the Americas, Slavs, Celts, and many others 

became, variously, “monstrous” and savage. Women could find salvation by fulfilling their 

“natural” roles as mothers and caregivers. In colonial worlds, especially in the Americas, African 

slaves and coerced indigenous proletarians could find salvation through work—largely or entirely 



 

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unpaid. In all instances, we see how the emergence of imperialist geoculture formed through new 

cosmologies of the Civilized and the Savage: the “illusions of the epoch.” 

 

Real Abstractions: From Commodity to Civilizational Fetishism in the Making of 

Planetary Crisis 

In Web of Life, I conceptualize this geocultural dynamic through a reconsideration of Sohn-

Rethel’s concept of real abstraction (1978). For Sohn-Rethel, the circulation of commodities in 

class society precipitates forms of abstraction in everyday life. These abstractions enable and 

obscure the class dimensions of the division between mental and manual labor. In this sense, real 

abstractions are not merely a mask to disguise the bloody realities of class society; they 

communicate and enable the prevailing “common sense” of Marx and Engels’s “ruling ideas.” To 

paraphrase Marx, the widening and deepening of the cash nexus sweats real abstractions from 

every pore. Such abstractions go beyond ideology as conventionally understood. They entangle 

directly and dialectically with modes of thought, the philosophical moments of modes of 

production and their “means of mental production” (Marx and Engels 2010: 59). Ruling 

abstractions enable specific forms of domination and surplus extraction in class societies. Implicit 

in this model is the suggestion that the greater the quantitative advance of monetary circulation 

(and therefore the greater development of class structures premised on the division between 

“thinking” and “doing”), the more likely is the possibility for a qualitative revolution in real 

abstraction, extending well beyond the domain of circulation. As the reader might guess, Sohn-

Rethel’s critique of real abstraction unfolds in the grand Marxist tradition of the critique of 

fetishization and alienation. Crucially, it joins dialectically the material, economic, and ideological 

domains within a unified frame.  

 In Web of Life and subsequent texts, I extended real abstraction beyond the circulation of 

value. Sohn-Rethel’s critique of commodity fetishism suggests a way to understand capitalism’s 

civilizational fetishism. Civilization and Savagery emerged as ruling abstractions through 

financialized imperialist projects—the Iberians are a prime example—committed to planetary 

management and the expansion of commodity frontiers. (A major theme in Web of Life.) 

Civilizational fetishism, in other words, is the historical and logical precondition for the 

globalization of commodity fetishism.  

 My operative premise, following Arrighi and Schumpeter, is that bourgeoisies are relatively 

powerless to establish the political conditions of a “good business environment,” or what I call 

Cheap Nature. The bourgeoisie simply cannot accumulate surplus value without the legal and 

military force of empires, which establish the political framework for capitalist competition on the 

world market. The world bourgeoisie cannot, in turn, counter-act the tendency towards a falling 

rate of profit without geocultures of domination, which not only suppress wages and consumption 

but divide the world proletariat through sexist, racist, and nationalist abstractions. Finally, such 

geocultures of domination are not only strategic to the superexploitation of humans but also, 



 

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through Prometheanism, to the rapid exhaustion of webs of life necessary to sustain endless 

accumulation.  

 In Web of Life and since, I have aimed to connect the ideological, material-ecological, and 

politico-economic within capitalism’s world histories. This is not a matter of abstract theorizing. 

Who and what the imperial bourgeoisie designates as Nature and Civilization is fundamental to 

understanding capitalism’s drive towards climate crisis, and its capitalogenic trinity: the climate 

class divide, climate patriarchy, and climate apartheid (Moore 2019; 2021d). An eco-socialism 

that relegates geocultural domination to the status of a secondary contradiction—rather than woven 

into the fabric of endless accumulation and the endless conquest of the Earth—is one that accepts 

the economic reductionism of bourgeois thought (including vulgar Marxisms) and disarms 

movements for planetary justice.  

 In this light, I reconceptualized Sohn-Rethel’s provocative thesis on real abstraction through 

world-historical investigation. Arguably the decisive narrative frame of Web of Life is the dialectic 

of project and process (Moore 2015: 13). The Civilizing Project looms large in the first moment. 

That Project goes by many names. For the Spanish, it was Christianization; for the French, la 

mission civilisatrice; for the British, the White Man’s Burden; for the Americans, Manifest 

Destiny, and after 1949, Modernization. Each of these empires assumed that their particular 

Civilizing Project represented the best that Humanity had to offer. Social formations that stared 

down the gun barrel of these Civilizing Project were, with the stroke of the pen, redefined as 

savage, irrational, lazy, warmongering, animalistic—in short, everything that the Civilized were 

not.  

 What does this have to do with the web of life? Everything. Human lifeways outside “the 

West”—but including virtually all peasants and most workers within the West—were relocated 

into a new cosmological domain, Nature. Nature is not merely a mythical domain and an 

ideological claim; it is a concrete class-ideological project. Nature is everything that bourgeoisies 

don’t want to pay for; only popular revolt and revolution forces adjustments (von Werlhof 1985). 

This is the strategy of Cheap Nature. It has a double register, each moment animating the other. 

One moment is to cheapen in price—not for everyone, but for imperial bourgeoisies. Another 

moment turns on the geocultural devaluations of Prometheanism, racism and sexism. (When Foster 

ignores this element of my argument, he contributes to a widely held perception that Marxism is 

unable to address geocultural domination in the history of capitalism and its drive towards 

planetary crisis.)  

 In linking capital’s geo-economic logic with capitalism’s geocultural logic of domination, we 

begin to see how extra-economic domination and force is central to the accumulation of capital—

and the devastation of planetary life. Cheapness as world-historical strategy joined imperial power, 

racism, patriarchy, and accumulation to enable the greatest environment-making revolution since 

the dawn of settled agriculture some 8,000 years earlier. This environment-making revolution 

pivoted on the ways that the ruling abstractions of Civilization and Savagery, or what today we 

call Society and Nature, joined with financialized imperialism to create and expand the world 

proletariat, dramatically in the two centuries after 1550.  



 

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 When Marx observes that capitalism degrades the soil and the worker, he is pointing also to 

the necessary conditions of capitalist development in the web of life (Marx 1977: 636-638). 

Capitalist class formation unfolds through the political imposition of property relations that allow 

for the two essential conditions of endless accumulation. One is Cheap Labor, including centrally 

the unpaid work of humans defined as Natural (for example, women). The second is Cheap Nature, 

which includes human work, as we have seen, but encompasses all webs of life put to work for 

capital. From this standpoint, “Proletariat” (putting humans to work for capital) and “Biotariat” 

(putting extra-human life to work for capital) form a world-historical unity (Moore 2021c; 2021d; 

Collis 2014). Whilst Bellamy Foster and Malm have been busy congratulating themselves on their 

faithfulness to Marx and their fidelity to the class struggle (and therefore, in classically dualist 

fashion, denouncing potential comrades as class enemies), they have been equally busy ignoring 

the dialectical relations between humans and other webs of life in a multi-species class struggle 

that is at the heart of today’s climate crisis.  

 It’s this class struggle in the web of life—the interpenetrating unity of Proletariat and Biotariat 

—that is the dialectical countertendency to the Civilizing Project and its Promethean fantasies. 

Prometheanism was the original form of domination, simultaneously creating a dualist cosmology 

of Civilization and Savagery and cultivating the bourgeois conceit that webs of life may be 

infinitely controlled in the interests of Man’s improvement. More than anything, this dialectic of 

project and process animates Web of Life, and allows us to see the fragility of capitalism’s 

environment-making dynamics today. Capitalism creates its biotarian gravediggers alongside the 

global proletarian forces, who together produce limits that cannot be “fixed” through capitalist 

politics-as-usual. This is the crescendo of Web of Life. The book begins with the climate crisis and 

capitalism’s Promethean projects of domination and exploitation; it ends with the activation of 

negative-value, the counter-tendencies of the law of value that threaten its negation. This for Marx 

is the communist horizon (Dean 2012): the generative proletarian-biotarian negation of 

capitalism’s ecocidal and genocidal logic.  

 My argument emerged through a reading of Marx’s method so elementary that it never 

occurred to me that the eco-socialists would find it controversial. In Web of Life, I follow Marx’s 

procedure by moving from general abstractions to progressively more determinate abstractions. 

For instance, I begin with Marx’s conception of work as a relation that remakes both the worker 

and “external nature” (Marx 1977: 283). This conception provisionally abstracts the history of 

class society. It is the basis for my concept of work/energy, which the reader encounters in the 

Introduction. Across multiple chapters, I elaborate the work/energy concept in relation to Marx’s 

theory of value and the history of actually existing capitalism, its class structures and its class 

struggles. This approach allowed me to emphasize the centrality of unpaid work—including the 

unpaid work of extra-human life—in capital accumulation. To underline the point: this unpaid 

work is a class struggle over the working day. Marx emphasizes the point in Capital: “What 

interests [capital] is purely and simply the maximum of labour-power that can be set in motion in 

a working day. It attains this objective by shortening the life of labour-power, in the same way as 

a greedy farmer snatches more produce from the soil by robbing it of its fertility” (Marx 1977: 



 

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376). This class struggle over unpaid work—mediated through the capitalist state, imperial 

formations, and the bourgeoisie’s ruling abstractions – includes not only the Biotariat, as we have 

just seen, but also the Femitariat, representing the gendered class struggle over human unpaid work 

and socio-biological reproduction (Moore 2015: chapter nine and passim; also Federici 2013).  

 The formation of the limits to capitalism in the twenty-first century stem from a socio-

ecological nexus of revolt and resistance to capitalism’s business as usual. The climate crisis, in 

particular, represents a key expression of this class struggle reading of the “limits to growth” shorn 

of its bourgeois fetishisms. For the climate crisis is not narrowly geophysical but expansively 

implicated in the deepening stagnation of capitalism’s core Cheap Nature nexus, between Cheap 

Food and Cheap Labor, including the spiral of radical agro-food politics of food sovereignty and 

food justice. The book begins with climate crisis—the book’s first citation is to Rockström’s work 

on planetary thresholds (2009)—and ends with the climate crisis, as a world-ecological tapestry of 

power, profit and life. This framing encourages narratives of the climate conjuncture as a crisis 

that incorporates geophysical change but is unknowable purely on that geophysical basis. (Listen 

to the Science is a pernicious slogan for sure, see Moore 2021f). A historical materialist 

understanding of the climate crisis requires that we join, as a dialectical unity, greenhouse gas 

concentrations with the climate class divide, climate patriarchy, and climate apartheid.   

 

The World-Ecology Conversation: Towards the Communist Horizon in the Web of Life 

Capitalism in the Web of Life emerged from, and contributed to, the world-ecology conversation. 

World-ecology builds squarely upon the dialectical, anti-imperialist, and revolutionary traditions 

of Marxism but refrains from the sectarian theorizing of “ecological Marxists.” It insists, with 

Lenin (quoted in Marcu 1943: 548), that we must be as “radical as reality itself.” And it asks us, 

with Raymond Williams (1980: 84), to approach the thorny questions of power, profit and life with 

a revolutionary humility, in pursuit of “radically honest” analyses. In other words, we must be 

ready to choose ideas over belief structures, dialectics over dogmas. Old verities that no longer 

serve the struggles against capitalogenic climate crisis—and for a revolutionary democratic rather 

than authoritarian-technocratic politices—must be confronted and dispensed with. Forgotten and 

obscured elements of radical thought, necessary to today’s climate class struggle, must be nurtured 

and recuperated. At every turn, the kinds of radically dishonest political smears (of commission 

and omission)—characteristic of the eco-socialist non-critiques—must be publicly identified and 

collectively repudiated.  

 The world-ecology conversation pursues a revolutionary synthesis long implicit in Marxism. 

It is a conversation that seeks to join, as differentiated unities, what Engels (1895) calls 

the “production and reproduction of real life,” the endless accumulation of capital, the 

militarization of economic life, and modernity’s ruling abstractions. I will repeat here—as virtually 

all my critics have missed the point—that historical materialism is historical, or it is nothing. At 

its best, historical materialism challenges intellectual business as usual—including Marxist belief 

structures. Among its enduring contributions has been the insistence that we grasp the diversity of 



 

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life (from which “the writing of history must always set out,” Marx and Engels remind us) as 

variously inside, outside, and in between the specific expressions of human relations. Humans are, 

like all life, an environment-making species; so too human organizations, from families to financial 

centers. Life is the connective tissue of inside, outside, in between; it makes human organization 

and human organization—unevenly and modestly, but today massively—makes webs of life. The 

work of empires and Civilizing Projects of every kind is not outside but integral to class formation 

and class conflicts, at every point appropriating webs of life necessary to advancing the world rate 

of profit and the class relations that underpin it.  

 With Marx and Engels, I am completely uninterested in throwing my “phrases” against others. 

Is my theory “better” than theirs? Like the hypothetical proletarians dancing on the head of a pin, 

the question is absurd. This is what the critics refuse to acknowledge. There is no better. There are 

only responses that more or less useful to the tasks of revolutionary struggle in the capitalogenic 

climate crisis. The point is not theory but revolutionary praxis. And here, world history, not 

abstract theorization and radical phrase-mongering, is fundamental. The crucible of what is, and 

what is not, useful is world history and the ideological struggle over the relevant frames of that 

history. And so we are back to the standpoint of the proletariat—but this time, the Planetary 

Proletariat in the web of life. It is from this standpoint of communism’s “real movement” that we 

may regain and reclaim the generative terrain of world-historical debate and contestation. For 

through this world-historical—and I would say, world-ecological—imaginary we may find the 

present as world history, and reclaim that history as a fundamental instrument of revolutionary 

theory. Radical concepts and theories must be battle-tested on the crucible of world history, refined 

and reinvented through revolutionary struggle in the planetary crisis. Radical ideas, to paraphrase 

the young Marx, can become material forces when mobilized by the proletarian forces in the web 

of life. (That is, the world-historical unity of Proletariat, Biotariat, and Femitariat). It is here that 

we may find a world-ecology of hope and praxis that will widen—rather than narrow through 

sectarian denunciations—the possibilities for the socialist emancipation of humans and the rest of 

nature. To borrow from Immanuel Wallerstein, ours is a moment of “worldwide class struggle” 

(Wallerstein 1983: 35) in the “socio-physical conjuncture” (Wallerstein 1974: 35). The communist 

horizon beckons as we unshackle ourselves from bourgeois naturalism and embrace planetary 

justice in the web of life. 

 

 

About the Author: Jason W. Moore is a historical geographer and world historian at Binghamton 

University, where he is a professor of sociology. He is author of  Capitalism in the Web of 

Life (2015), Transformations of the Earth: Nature in the Making and Unmaking of the Modern 

World (2015, in Chinese), Ecologia-mondo e crisi del capitalismo: La fine della natura a buon 

mercato (2015); and co-author of A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things: A Guide to 

Capitalism, Nature, and the Future of the Planet (2017) with Raj Patel. He is co-coordinator of 

the World-Ecology Research Network. Many of his essays can be found on his 

website: www.jasonwmoore.com. 

https://worldecologynetwork.wordpress.com/
http://www.jasonwmoore.com/


 

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Disclosure Statement: Any conflicts of interest are reported in the acknowledgments section of 

the article’s text. Otherwise, authors have indicated that they have no conflict of interests upon 

submission of the article to the journal. 

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