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ISBN: PB: 9780226451107

ISBN: HB: 9780226451091

University of Chicago Press

February 2012

368 pp.

23x15 cm

3 tables, 10 halftones, 4 line illus.

PB:
£30,00
QTY:
HB:
£90,00
QTY:

Categories:

Capitalism Takes Command

The Social Transformation of Nineteenth-Century America

Most scholarship on nineteenth-century America's transformation into a market society has focused on consumption, romanticized visions of workers, and analysis of firms and factories. Building on but moving past these studies, "Capitalism Takes Command" presents a history of family farming, general incorporation laws, mortgage payments, inheritance practices, office systems, and risk management – an inventory of the means by which capitalism became America's new revolutionary tradition.

This multidisciplinary collection of essays argues not only that capitalism reached far beyond the purview of the economy, but also that the revolution was not confined to the destruction of an agrarian past. As business ceaselessly revised its own practices, a new demographic of private bankers, insurance brokers, investors in securities, and start-up manufacturers, among many others, assumed center stage, displacing older elites and forms of property. Explaining how capital became an "ism" and how business became a political philosophy, "Capitalism Takes Command" brings the economy back into American social and cultural history.

About the Author

Michael Zakim is associate professor of history at Tel Aviv University. He is the author of "Ready-Made Democracy: A History of Men's Dress in the American Republic, 1760-1860", also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Gary J. Kornblith is professor of history at Oberlin College and the author of "Slavery and Sectional Strife in the Early American Republic, 1776-1821".

Reviews

"Rarely has a collection of essays from a dozen scholars created a whole greater than the sum of its parts, but 'Capitalism Takes Command' conveys with detail, coherence, and sophistication the changes in the American economy in the nineteenth century under the multiple imperatives of capitalism" – Joyce Appleby, University of California, Los Angeles

"The history of capitalism has attracted growing numbers of scholars, and this volume makes it clear why. By turns provocative, enlightening, and brilliant, the essays collected here capture capitalism's twinned powers of creation and destruction. Essential reading for anyone interested in the future of the field" – Stephen Mihm, University of Georgia

"This exemplary collection of essays provides the most finely tuned and precise renderings we have in the literature of a burgeoning culture of capitalism that created new economic practices, instruments, and institutions and shaped the ways in which Americans perceived and made meaning of the epic social and cultural transformations unfolding around them. 'Capitalism Takes Command' is required reading for specialists in nineteenth-century American history, economists, and students of American culture" – Brian Luskey, West Virginia University