Economists' Lives: Biography and Autobiography in the History of EconomicsE. Roy Weintraub, Evelyn L. Forget Duke University Press, 2007 - 402 páginas This collection of essays, a supplement to History of Political Economy, brings together prominent scholars from economics, sociology, literature, and history to examine the role of biography and autobiography in the history of economics. The first of its kind, this volume looks at the relevance of first-person accounts to narrative histories of economics. The essays consider both the potential and the limits of life writing, which has traditionally been used sparingly by historians of economics, and examine types of biographies, the relationship between autobiography and identity, and the writing of biography. Contributors to this collection question whether biography is essential to understanding the history of economic ideas and consider how autobiographical materials should be read and interpreted by historians. Articles consider the treatment of autobiographical materials such as conversations and testimonies, the construction of heroes and villains, the relationship between scientific biography and literary biography, and concerns related to living subjects. Several essays address the role of biography and autobiography in the study of economists such as F. A. Hayek, Harry Johnson, Alfred Marshall, John Maynard Keynes, Oskar Morgenstern, and François Quesnay, concluding with several accounts of the interconnection of the historians' projects with their own autobiographies. All 2007 subscribers to History of Political Economy will receive a copy of "Economists' Lives: Biography and Autobiography in the History of Economics" as part of their subscription. Contributors |
Dentro del libro
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... monetary theory could have adequately analyzed the British unemployment of the 1920s and 1930s as the result of misguided monetary policy and a fixed , overval- ued exchange rate . Nonetheless , " eminent British economists sought to ...
... monetary theorist L. Albert Hahn on the occasion of Hahn's seventieth birthday . Machlup ( 1959 , 50 ) saw the answers to this question to be “ largely . . . psychological in char- acter " and claimed : " The world lends a more ...
... monetary theory as well . This fact is remarkable enough , since this type of economic the- ory was not well - known in Germany during the 1920s . Hahn did not reject Anglo - Saxon monetary theory but showed that the quantity theory of ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Is Autobiography Antiacademic and Uneconomical? | 30 |
The Production and Use | 51 |
Derechos de autor | |
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