This volume uses the extreme case of misers to examine interlocking categories that undergirded the emergence of modern British society, including new perspectives on charity, morality, and marriage; new representations of passion and sympathy; and new modes of saving, spending, and investment.
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"a vast, rich archive that builds a foundation for both deeper investigation into particular texts or genres, as well as for a broader discussion of capitalism and culture." - Peter J. Katz, California Northstate University, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"There are some indications that the vexed separation of economics and history is being bridged, or at least patched, by something new, loosely called "his>tories of economic life." If so, Alborn is surely among the founding practitioners of that approach. With earlier books on corporate governance, life insurance, and the cultural power of gold, Alborn has ranged widely across the experience of economic life in eighteenth and nineteenth century Britain. Misers is another valuable contribution" - Trevor Jackson, George Washington University, Eighteenth Century Studies
"There are some indications that the vexed separation of economics and history is being bridged, or at least patched, by something new, loosely called "his>tories of economic life." If so, Alborn is surely among the founding practitioners of that approach. With earlier books on corporate governance, life insurance, and the cultural power of gold, Alborn has ranged widely across the experience of economic life in eighteenth and nineteenth century Britain. Misers is another valuable contribution" - Trevor Jackson, George Washington University, Eighteenth Century Studies
"a vast, rich archive that builds a foundation for both deeper investigation into particular texts or genres, as well as for a broader discussion of capitalism and culture." - Peter J. Katz, California Northstate University, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"There are some indications that the vexed separation of economics and history is being bridged, or at least patched, by something new, loosely called "his>tories of economic life." If so, Alborn is surely among the founding practitioners of that approach. With earlier books on corporate governance, life insurance, and the cultural power of gold, Alborn has ranged widely across the experience of economic life in eighteenth and nineteenth century Britain. Misers is another valuable contribution" - Trevor Jackson, George Washington University, Eighteenth Century Studies
"There are some indications that the vexed separation of economics and history is being bridged, or at least patched, by something new, loosely called "his>tories of economic life." If so, Alborn is surely among the founding practitioners of that approach. With earlier books on corporate governance, life insurance, and the cultural power of gold, Alborn has ranged widely across the experience of economic life in eighteenth and nineteenth century Britain. Misers is another valuable contribution" - Trevor Jackson, George Washington University, Eighteenth Century Studies