Where to start. Baucom examines the oscillations between commodity and finance capital systems, but focuses specifically on the "long 20th century" of finance capital that stretches back into the 18th century. He draws on Benjamin to develop a philosophy of history that emphasizes history's presence in the now, what he calls the constellation of past and present. He does this all by drawing upon the trope of the slaveship Zong, and manages to convey that event as both typical of finance capital and as specific, uncomparable. He demonstrates how novels and other texts helped form the commodity and speculative epistemologies. His language is stunning, his structure matches his theory (his work cycles and recycles, it montages history a la Benjamin), he treats Spivak, Jameson, Benjamin, Kant and others with equal grace. Incredible.