Associate Professor, Department of African American Studies and Department of History
Peter James Hudson is Associate Professor of African American Studies and History. Peter James Hudson is a historian who completed his Ph.D. in the American Studies Program at New York University. His research interests are in the history of capitalism, white supremacy, and U.S. imperialism; the intellectual and political-economic history of the Caribbean and the Black world; and the history of Black radicalism and global anti-imperialism. He is the author of Bankers and Empire: How Wall Street Colonized the Caribbean (University of Chicago Press, 2017).
Education
PhD American Studies, New York University, 2007
Selected Publications
Book
Bankers and Empire: How Wall Street Colonized the Caribbean (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017 and 2018).
Essays and Articles
Fighting Back: Comments on Imperial Banking and Caribbean Resistance, Antipode Foundation (November 2018).
Banking on a ‘shithole’: US-led racial capitalism in Haiti began long before Trump, London School of Economics Latin American and Caribbean Center, (April 4, 2018).
Architecture and Black Autonomy, Mark Bradford: Tomorrow is Another Day, Christopher Bedford and Kay Siegel, eds. (Gregory R. Miller and Co. 2017), 19-27
Racial Capitalism and the Dark Proletariat, Boston Review: Forum I, (January 2017), 59-65
Who killed Robert McCulloch’s Father? Los Angeles Review of Books (September 18, 2014)
On African Canadian Thought (co-authored with Dr. Aaron Kamugisha), The CLR James Journal: Journal of the Caribbean Philosophical Association September 23, 2014
On the history and historiography of banking in the Caribbean, Small Axe: A Caribbean Platform of Criticism 43 (March 2014), 22-37
The National City Bank of New York and Haiti, 1909-1922, Radical History Review, 115 (Winter 2013), 91-114
African Diaspora Studies and the Corporate Turn, Aswad Forum, No. 1 (2013) Germaine, Evangeline, and other ‘Negro girls’: Rudy Burckhardt’s Caribbean, Small Axe: A Caribbean Platform of Criticism 37 (March 2012), 1-19
Reviews and Review Essays
Review of The Caribbean Memory Project, sx archipelagos 2 (July 2017).
The Racist Dawn of Capitalism: Unearthing the Economy of Bondage, Boston Review, March 14, 2016.
Review of B.W. Higman and Kathleen E.A. Monteith, eds, West Indian Business History: Enterprise and Entrepreneurship, (Mona, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press, 2010) and Eric Armstrong, A History of Money and Banking in Barbados, 1627-1973 (Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press, 2010) Caribbean Studies, 40.2 (2012): 211-217.
A radical rereading of the life of Malcolm X: Review of Manning Marable, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention, The Guardian (16 April 2011).