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Means and ends : the idea of capital in the West, 1500-1970 / Francesco Boldizzoni.
Lippincott Library HC240.9.C3 B65 2008
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Boldizzoni, Francesco, 1979-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Capital--Europe--History.
- Capital.
- History.
- Europe--Economic conditions.
- Europe.
- Economic conditions.
- Physical Description:
- viii, 221 pages ; 23 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Basingstoke [England] ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
- Summary:
- The idea of capital dominated the imagination of Western society throughout the era of its greatest economic development, from the Industrial Revolution up to the 1970s. Means and Ends provides a unique and comprehensive interpretation of this idea, examining it both within and outside a political economy framework, and tracing its rise and evolution from the sixteenth century trough to the modern era. Based on a wealth of primary sources, this is a stimulating work of cultural and intellectual history which sheds new light on one of the guiding concepts of our age.
- Contents:
- 1 Capital as Money: The Emergence of Modernity 8
- Before capitalism: The prehistory of a word 10
- Middle Ages and Renaissance 11
- A modern disenchantment 13
- Economics and theology: The long sixteenth century 17
- The years of high theory 21
- 2 Land and Labour, 1650-1800 25
- Money is the fat of the body-politick' 26
- The maieutics of production 27
- Agriculture as principle of wealth 29
- The primacy of nature in France 31
- 'Art' and 'industry': The incubation of the English spirit 35
- The science of productivity 37
- 3 Reproduction and Transition 40
- One rich economy but with no drive, another constantly on the move: France and Britain in the eighteenth century 40
- Money and the Physiocrats 45
- A system based on avarices 47
- The job of the capitalist 50
- A eulogy of finance 52
- Earnings on capital 53
- Progress and poverty: British thought at the start of the Industrial Revolution 54
- A (limited) vision of development 56
- Agriculture and manufacturing 58
- Circulating capital in Smith and Ricardo 61
- 4 Industrial Maturity 65
- A new idea of capital 66
- Technology and accumulation 68
- Towards self-expansion of the system 72
- Ideas and reality: A quantitative view 80
- The Revolt of 1867 84
- The social nature of capital 85
- The form of capital: A phylogenetic approach 87
- The age of machinery I. Manufacturing and industry: Difference of kind, not of degree 89
- The age of machinery II. The destruction of the social fabric 93
- Primitive accumulation 96
- Revisions and self-interpretations: Marx and Anglo-Marxism 98
- The Atlantic Reaction 108
- The economic virtues of Victorian Britain 109
- The sentimental education of Marshall 111
- Accumulation of capital and civil progress 112
- The defence of capital in America 116
- The spectre of communism takes form 117
- Social Darwinism and predestination 119
- Distribution as a fact of nature: J.B. Clark 121
- The Continent, 1870-1938 126
- The legacy of the 'Austrias' 128
- German socialism 133
- Italy and France: An excursus 138
- The return of the Popes 143
- The Eastern border 146
- Keynes and After: Crisis and Continuity 150
- Britain's decline and the challenge of affluence 151
- Keynes and the Great Depression: A new economic ethics? 153
- The generation divide at Cambridge 155
- Accumulation as a moral duty: Joan Robinson 158
- Beginning and end of a controversy 163
- Where are we heading? 167.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 170-210) and index.
- ISBN:
- 023057257X
- 9780230572577
- OCLC:
- 223370163
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