Veblen was an original thinker, responsible for introducing and popularising a host of important concepts and insights. He ignited controversy not only in economics, but also in sociology, history and political science. The number and quality of the responses to his work provide evidence of the novelty and explanatory power of his ideas. These comprehensive volumes should enable the reader to sample the broad spectrum of Veblen's thought and that of his critics and interpreters. They include critical appraisals of the corpus of his published work as well as reinterpretations of his life and influence on the social sciences particularly economics, political science and sociology. This authoritative collection includes reprints of materials previously published by leading scholars on nearly every aspect of Veblen's life and work. It should be invaluable to professional scholars and graduate students who wish to heighten their understanding of the alternatives to formalism in the social studies.
Veblen was an original thinker, responsible for introducing and popularising a host of important concepts and insights. He ignited controversy not only in economics, but also in sociology, history and political science. The number and quality of the responses to his work provide evidence of the novelty and explanatory power of his ideas. These comprehensive volumes should enable the reader to sample the broad spectrum of Veblen's thought and that of his critics and interpreters. They include critical appraisals of the corpus of his published work as well as reinterpretations of his life and influence on the social sciences particularly economics, political science and sociology. This authoritative collection includes reprints of materials previously published by leading scholars on nearly every aspect of Veblen's life and work. It should be invaluable to professional scholars and graduate students who wish to heighten their understanding of the alternatives to formalism in the social studies.
Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Rick Tilman
PART I ORIGINS AND BASIS OF VEBLEN’S THOUGHT
1. William M. Dugger (1979), ‘The Origins of Thorstein Veblen’s
Thought’
2. Anne Mayhew (1987), ‘The Beginnings of Institutionalism’
3. Philip Mirowski (1987), ‘The Philosophical Bases of
Institutionalist Economics’
4. Stephen Edgell and Rick Tilman (1989), ‘The Intellectual
Antecedents of Thorstein Veblen: A Reappraisal’
PART II HIS THEORY OF EVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENT AND INSTITUTIONAL
CHANGE
5. Stephen Edgell (1975), ‘Thorstein Veblen’s Theory of
Evolutionary Change’
6. Malcolm Rutherford (1984), ‘Thorstein Veblen and the Processes
of Institutional Change’
7. Paul D. Bush (1987), ‘The Theory of Institutional Change’
8. Ann Jennings and William Waller (1994), ‘Evolutionary Economics
and Cultural Hermeneutics: Veblen, Cultural Relativism, and Blind
Drift’
9. Geoffrey M. Hodgson (1998), ‘On the Evolution of Thorstein
Veblen’s Evolutionary Economics’
10. Clare Virginia Eby (1998), ‘Veblen’s Assault on Time’
PART III THEORY OF HUMAN NATURE
11. Melville J. Herskovits (1936), ‘The Significance of Thorstein
Veblen for Anthropology’
12. Thomas C. Mayberry (1969), ‘Thorstein Veblen on Human
Nature’
13. John P. Diggins (1977), ‘Animism and the Origins of Alienation:
The Anthropological Perspective of Thorstein Veblen’
14. William T. Waller, Jr. (1988), ‘The Concept of Habit in
Economic Analysis’
15. Stephen Edgell and Jules Townshend (1993), ‘Marx and Veblen on
Human Nature, History, and Capitalism: Vive la Différence!’
PART IV CONSUMPTION
16. H. Leibenstein (1950), ‘Bandwagon, Snob, and Veblen Effects in
the Theory of Consumers’ Demand’
17. Robert L. Steiner and Joseph Weiss (1951), ‘Veblen Revised in
the Light of Counter-Snobbery’
18. David B. Hamilton (1987), ‘Institutional Economics and
Consumption’
19. Stephen Edgell (1992), ‘Veblen and Post-Veblen Studies of
Conspicuous Consumption: Social Stratification and Fashion’
20. Roger Mason (1995), ‘Interpersonal Effects on Consumer Demand
in Economic Theory and Marketing Thought, 1890–1950’
21. Colin Campbell (1995), ‘Conspicuous Confusion? A Critique of
Veblen’s Theory of Conspicuous Consumption’
22. Rick Tilman (1999), ‘Thorstein Veblen and the Disinterest of
Neoclassical Economists in Wasteful Consumption’
PART V CRITIC OF CLASSICAL AND NEOCLASSICAL ECONOMICS
23. A.W. Coats (1954), ‘The Influence of Veblen’s Methodology’
24. Marc R. Tool (1977), ‘A Social Value Theory in Neoinstitutional
Economics’
25. Syamal K. Ghosh (1984), ‘On the Validity of Veblen’s Criticisms
of Economic Orthodoxy: An Analysis of His Positions in the Light of
Current Conditions and Economic Thought’
26. Sasan Fayazmanesh (1998), ‘On Veblen’s Coining of the Term
"Neoclassical"’
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editor to all three volumes appears in
Volume I
PART I VEBLEN’S ECONOMIC SYSTEM
1. Karl L. Anderson (1933), ‘The Unity of Veblen’s Theoretical
System’
2. J.A. Hobson (1937), ‘The Economics of Thorstein Veblen’
3. Paul M. Sweezy (1957), ‘The Theory of Business Enterprise and
Absentee Ownership’
4. Kenneth J. Arrow (1975), ‘Thorstein Veblen as an Economic
Theorist’
5. Donald A. Walker (1977), ‘Thorstein Veblen’s Economic
System’
6. James M. Cypher (1998), ‘Financial Dominance in the US Economy:
The Increased Relevance of Veblen’s Analysis in a Post-Keynesian
Structure’
PART II ON SOCIALISM AND RADICAL ECONOMICS
7. Joseph E. Pluta and Charles G. Leathers (1978), ‘Veblen and
Modern Radical Economics’
8. E.K. Hunt (1979), ‘The Importance of Thorstein Veblen for
Contemporary Marxism’
9. James Ronald Stanfield (1989), ‘Veblenian and Neo-Marxian
Perspectives On the Cultural Crisis of Late Capitalism’
10. William M. Dugger and William Waller (1996), ‘Radical
Institutionalism: From Technological to Democratic
Instrumentalism’
PART III VEBLEN AS SOCIOLOGIST AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHER
11. Arthur K. Davis (1945), ‘Sociological Elements in Veblen’s
Economic Theory’
12. Abram L. Harris (1953), ‘Veblen as Social Philosopher – A
Reappraisal’
13. David Riesman (1953), ‘The Social and Psychological Setting of
Veblen’s Economic Theory’
PART IV SOCIOLOGY OF KNOWLEDGE AND CULTURE
14. Walter P. Metzger (1949), ‘Ideology and the Intellectual: A
Study of Thorstein Veblen’
15. Frank J. Weed (1972), ‘Thorstein Veblen’s Sociology of
Knowledge’
16. Warren J. Samuels (1990), ‘The Self-Referentiability of
Thorstein Veblen’s Theory of the Preconceptions of Economic
Science’
17. Rick Tilman (1999), ‘The Frankfurt School and the Problem of
Social Rationality in Thorstein Veblen’
PART V FEMINISM
18. Edythe S. Miller (1972), ‘Veblen and Women’s Lib: A
Parallel’
19. Jeffrey Waddoups and Rick Tilman (1992), ‘Thorstein Veblen and
the Feminism of Institutional Economists’
20. Clare Virginia Eby (1992), ‘Veblen’s Anti-Anti-Feminism’
21. Ann Jennings (1998), ‘Veblen’s Feminism in Historical
Perspective’
22. Nils Gilman (1999), ‘Thorstein Veblen’s Neglected Feminism’
PART VI SATIRIST, STYLIST AND GRAMMARIAN
23. John Cummings (1899), ‘The Theory of the Leisure Class’
24. Joseph Dorfman (1932), ‘The "Satire" of Thorstein Veblen’s
Theory of the Leisure Class’
25. Teresa Toulouse (1985), ‘Veblen and His Reader: Rhetoric and
Intention in The Theory of the Leisure Class’
26. Paul D. Bush (1999), ‘Veblen’s "Olympian Detachment"
Reconsidered’
27. Gary Alan Fine (1994), ‘The Social Construction of Style:
Thorstein Veblen’s The Theory of the Leisure Class as Contested
Text’
PART VII ON THE HIGHER LEARNING IN AMERICA
28. Charles A. Beard (1918), ‘The Hire Learning in America’
29. Harold J. Laski (1919), ‘The Higher Learning in America’
30. Thomas Sowell (1969), ‘Veblen’s Higher Learning After Fifty
Years’
31. Arthur J. Vidich (1994), ‘The Higher Learning in America in
Veblen’s Time and Our Own’
Name Index
Volume III
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editor to all three volumes appears in
Volume I
PART I HIS IDEAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
1. H.J. Hodder (1956), ‘The Political Ideas of Thorstein
Veblen’
2. Rick Tilman (1972), ‘Veblen’s Ideal Political Economy and Its
Critics’
3. Donald R. Stabile (1988), ‘Veblen’s Analysis of Social
Movements: Bellamyites, Workers, and Engineers’
4. Charles G. Leathers (1989), ‘Thorstein Veblen’s Theories of
Governmental Failure: The Critic of Capitalism and Democracy
Neglected Some Useful Insights, Hindsight Shows’
5. Malcolm Rutherford (1992), ‘Thorstein Veblen and the Problem of
the Engineers’
PART II THE ROLE OF THE STATE IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
6. Niles M. Hansen (1964), ‘Weber and Veblen on Economic
Development’
7. Clarence E. Ayres (1960), ‘Institutionalism and Economic
Development’
8. Geoffrey Hodgson (1996), ‘An Evolutionary Theory of Long-Term
Economic Growth’
PART III GERMANY AND JAPAN: IMPERIALISM, WAR AND PEACE
9. Graham Wallas (1915), ‘Veblen’s Imperial Germany and the
Industrial Revolution’
10. George H. Mead (1918), ‘The Nature of Peace and the Terms of
Its Perpetuation. By Thorstein Veblen’
11. Henry A. Wallace (1940), ‘Veblen’s "Imperial Germany and the
Industrial Revolution"’
12. William Appleman Williams (1957), ‘The Nature of Peace’
13. Derk Visser (1969), ‘The German Captain of Enterprise: Veblen’s
Imperial Germany Revisited’
14. Jeff E. Biddle and Warren J. Samuels (1991), ‘Thorstein Veblen
on War, Peace, and National Security’
PART IV THE BUSINESS/INDUSTRY DICHOTOMY
15. J.A. Banks (1959), ‘Veblen and Industrial Sociology’
16. William T. Waller, Jr. (1982), ‘The Evolution of the Veblenian
Dichotomy: Veblen, Hamilton, Ayres, and Foster’
17. Phillip Anthony O’Hara (1993), ‘Veblen’s Analysis of Business,
Industry and the Limits of Capital: An Interpretation and
Sympathetic Critique’
18. Geoffrey M. Hodgson (1998), ‘Dichotomizing the Dichotomy:
Veblen versus Ayres’
PART V EGALITARIAN THEORIST OF COLLECTIVE WEALTH
19. Ken McCormick (1989), ‘Veblen on the Nature of Capital’
20. Phillip Anthony O’Hara (1999), ‘Thorstein Veblen’s Theory of
Collective Social Wealth, Instincts and Property Relations’
PART VI ECOLOGY AND DEMOGRAPHICS
21. Joseph J. Spengler (1972), ‘Veblen on Population and
Resources’
22. Wilbur R. Jacobs (1978), ‘The Great Despoliation: Environmental
Themes in American Frontier History’
23. Ron D. White (1978), ‘Growth versus Conservation: A Veblenian
Perspective’
PART VII VEBLEN’S LIFE AND WORK RECONSIDERED
24. Florence Veblen (1931), ‘Thorstein Veblen: Reminiscences of His
Brother Orson’
25. Stephen Edgell (1996), ‘Rescuing Veblen From Valhalla:
Deconstruction and Reconstruction of a Sociological Legend’
26. Russell H. Bartley and Sylvia Erickson Bartley (2000),
‘Stigmatizing Thorstein Veblen: A Study in the Confection of
Academic Reputations’
PART VIII VEBLEN’S INTELLECTUAL LEGACY
27. Solidelle Fortier Wasser (1994), ‘Veblen’s "Post-Modernist"
Economics’
28. C. Wright Mills (1953), ‘Introduction to the Mentor
Edition’
29. C.E. Ayres (1963), ‘The Legacy of Thorstein Veblen’
Name Index
Edited by Rick Tilman, Professor Emeritus of Public Administration, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, US
'The thoughtful anthology on studies of Veblen is most timely in an
era when profits no longer have much to do with productivity and
conspicuous consumption is more conspicuous than ever. America's
greatest social scientist dealt with emotions that continue to
plague us - competitive rivalry, desire, envy, emulation.'
*- John Patrick Diggins, Graduate Center, City University of New
York, US*
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