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E-grāmata: Capitalism and Commerce in Imaginative Literature: Perspectives on Business from Novels and Plays

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Fiction can be a powerful force to educate students and employees in ways that lectures, textbooks, articles, case studies, and other traditional teaching approaches cannot. This anthology includes articles from a number of individuals from a range of different disciplines and perspectives. All of the contributors to Capitalism and Commerce in Imaginative Literature are committed to treating literary texts with integrity and believe that business should have a larger claim upon peoples literary consciousness. In addition, they all value the important role of literature in dealing with the complexities of a capitalist culture. This collection of essays provides a means to appreciate the richness and variety of fictional portrayals of businesses and businesspersons. The works selected for examination reflect the variety of philosophical, political, economic, cultural, social, and ethical perspectives that have been found over time in American society. The novels and plays analyzed include high literature, mid-range literature, popular literature, ancient epics, grand narratives, hero tales, masterpieces, ideological texts, science fiction, and more. There are a great many works of literature waiting to be read and studied by business and economically-minded individuals from many different viewpoints and fields of study. This volume provides a space to explore a wide range of fictional works and opinions about them.

Recenzijas

In this volume, Edward W. Younkins brings together a remarkably talented and diverse group of scholars who provide us with provocative essays that break down the walls between economics and literary criticism, history, and imagination. The result is a collection that challenges conventional perspectives on classic literature and historical interpretation. -- Chris Matthew Sciabarra, New York University Congratulations to Ed Younkins for an imaginative work on a most important topic. Students are going to love it, and learn from it. -- Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr., Mises Institute Capitalism and Commerce in Imaginative Literature is an excellent collection of essays that should prove most useful in any management or business ethics course. -- Douglas B. Rasmussen, St. Johns University 'The business of America is business, said Calvin Coolidge. So it is entirely fitting that scholars of various disciplines should look at the portrayal of business and economic activity in literature, American and otherwise. These essays may even make you want to reador rereadElizabeth Gaskell, Willa Cather, or August Wilson. -- David Boaz, Executive Vice President, Cato Institute This may be the definitive anthology on literature and business. It offers a truly remarkable range of perspectives and insights. -- Joseph L. Badaracco, Harvard Business School We have too long spoken of the opposition between business and literature, but in this remarkable collection that distorted perception is not only corrected, but overridden. With impressive diversity of both topics and authors, this collection of essays highlights the synergies between commerce and culture. I have little doubt that this volume will also inspire future artistic endeavors with business as the central subject. -- Douglas Den Uyl, Vice President of Educational Programs, Liberty Fund Marcel Proust famously said, The writers work isan optical instrument to enable [ the reader] to discern what, without this book, he would perhaps never have experienced in himself. And the recognition by the reader in his own self of what the book says in the proof of its veracity. I cant think of more powerful application of this insight than in the new volume edited by Ed Younkins, Capitalism and Commerce in Imaginative Literature. In 28 extraordinarily diverse essays, the authors explore alternative worlds that might have been and could never be, as a means of exploring worlds readers couldnt possibly have experienced. The essays work as literature on their own, but their real importance is as thought experiments: What does it mean to be human, and what does it mean to engage in commerce. A tour de force for economist and literature scholar alike. -- Michael C. Munger, Duke University

Preface xi
Introduction 1(14)
1 Capitalism and Commerce in Novels and Plays
15(34)
Edward W. Younkins
2 Epic and the Medium of Exchange
49(18)
Frederick Turner
3 The Cost of War and the Profits of Peace in Aristophanes' Acharnians
67(12)
Troy Earl Camplin
4 A Time for Bonding: Commerce, Love, and Law in The Merchant of Venice
79(16)
Allen Mendenhall
5 Human Action: Pursuing Happiness Inside and Outside the Happy Valley
95(18)
Felix R. Livingston
6 The Rime of the Neoclassical Economist: The Economist's Failure at Spreading the Passion of Capitalism
113(12)
Derek K. Yonai
7 Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South: Industrial Energy Versus "The Idiocies of Rural Life"
125(18)
Paul A. Cantor
8 Where Have You Gone, Horatio Alger: A Long Gone Literary Hero and the Bourgeois Virtues
143(14)
Amy Willis
9 Crony Capitalism in The Gilded Age by Twain and Warner and Its Relevance for Today
157(12)
Michelle Albert Vachris
10 Henrik Ibsen's An Enemy of the People
169(6)
Cynthia Hunter
11 William Dean Ho wells' Work Ethic in The Rise of Silas Lapham
175(10)
Zennure Koseman
12 Capitalism Contra Ethics: William Dean Howells and the Moral Ambivalence of Business
185(18)
Michael Spindler
13 The Panic of '93: The Literary Response
203(26)
Stephen Cox
14 Heroism Redefined: Integrating Mind and Emotion in Calumet "K"
229(10)
Virginia Murr
15 Women's Work: Edna Ferber, Emma McChesney, and the Portrait of the American Businesswoman
239(14)
Sarah Skwire
16 The Great Gatsby: A Commentary on the Wealthy in America of the 1920s
253(6)
Gary Wolfram
17 Steinbeck's Perspectives on Capitalism: From The Grapes of Wrath to East of Eden
259(10)
Mimi Reisel Gladstein
18 Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged, and Libertarianism
269(10)
Walter E. Block
19 The Freedom Gradient in Ayn Rand's Novels
279(8)
Andrew Bernstein
20 Identity, Professional Ethics, and Substantive Style in The Fountainhead
287(16)
William Kline
21 Business in Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged
303(28)
Edward W. Younkins
22 Business as an Agent of Human Progress in Time Will Run Back, Methuselah's Children, and The Transhumanist Wager
331(28)
Gennady Stolyarov
23 Rabbit in the Showroom: Healthy, Wealthy, and No Place Left to Run
359(8)
Carl S. Horner
24 Roger Rueffs Hospitality Suite
367(8)
Theodore N. Pauls
25 Writing, Money, Markets, Slavery, and Unintended Consequences at the Beginning of History: Samuel R. Delany's Return to Neveryon
375(10)
Jeff Riggenbach
26 "We Do Not Sow": The Economics and Politics of A Song of Ice and Fire
385(14)
Matthew McCaffrey
Carmen Elena Dorobat
27 Harry Potter and the Invisible Hand; or, the Virtue of Business That Is Not Serious
399(18)
Heather King
28 Race, Rules, and Real Estate in August Wilson's Radio Golf
417(14)
Susan Love Brown
Index 431(32)
About the Contributors 463
Edward W. Younkins is professor of accountancy and director of graduate business programs at Wheeling Jesuit University.