The Nile on eBay FREE SHIPPING UK WIDE The Poverty of Clio by Francesco Boldizzoni
Challenges the hold that cliometrics - an approach to economic history that employs the analytical tools of economists - has exerted on the study of our economic past. This book calls for the reconstruction of economic history, one in which history and the social sciences are brought to bear on economics, and not the other way around.
FORMATHardcover LANGUAGEEnglish CONDITIONBrand New Publisher Description
The Poverty of Clio challenges the hold that cliometrics--an approach to economic history that employs the analytical tools of economists--has exerted on the study of our economic past. In this provocative book, Francesco Boldizzoni calls for the reconstruction of economic history, one in which history and the social sciences are brought to bear on economics, and not the other way around. Boldizzoni questions the appeal of economics over history--which he identifies as a distinctly American attitude--exposing its errors and hidden ideologies, and revealing how it fails to explain economic behavior itself. He shows how the misguided reliance on economic reasoning to interpret history has come at the expense of insights from the humanities and has led to a rejection of valuable past historical research. Developing a better alternative to new institutional economics and the rational choice approach, Boldizzoni builds on the extraordinary accomplishments of twentieth-century European historians and social thinkers to offer fresh ideas for the renewal of the field.Economic history needs to rediscover the true relationship between economy and culture, and promote an authentic alliance with the social sciences, starting with sociology and anthropology. It must resume its dialogue with the humanities, but without shrinking away from theory when constructing its models. The Poverty of Clio demonstrates why history must exert its own creative power on economics.
Back Cover
"With impressive erudition and verve, Boldizzoni laments that much economic history has become a mere handmaiden of neoclassical economics. He seeks to reinvigorate its classic focus on how the economy unfolds in its social and cultural setting. Drawing on sophisticated and subtle European historiography such as the Annales school, he makes a vivid, detailed, and persuasive case. I highly recommend this sweeping and provocative study." --Mark Granovetter, Stanford University "Boldizzoni has written a powerful polemic that combines an impressive survey of a great deal of recent cliometric economic history writing with an impassioned plea for the revival of the European social-science tradition. The theme, simply stated, is the erroneous and irrelevant character of most economic history writing. It is a book that needed to be written." --Harold James, Princeton University "I am struck by the immense and impressive range of The Poverty of Clio . Few works in historiography can muster the scope and learning of this book, which will make it attractive not just to economic historians but to sociologists and historians of culture more generally." --Frank Trentmann, author of Free Trade Nation
Flap
"With impressive erudition and verve, Boldizzoni laments that much economic history has become a mere handmaiden of neoclassical economics. He seeks to reinvigorate its classic focus on how the economy unfolds in its social and cultural setting. Drawing on sophisticated and subtle European historiography such as the Annales school, he makes a vivid, detailed, and persuasive case. I highly recommend this sweeping and provocative study." --Mark Granovetter, Stanford University "Boldizzoni has written a powerful polemic that combines an impressive survey of a great deal of recent cliometric economic history writing with an impassioned plea for the revival of the European social-science tradition. The theme, simply stated, is the erroneous and irrelevant character of most economic history writing. It is a book that needed to be written." --Harold James, Princeton University "I am struck by the immense and impressive range of The Poverty of Clio . Few works in historiography can muster the scope and learning of this book, which will make it attractive not just to economic historians but to sociologists and historians of culture more generally." --Frank Trentmann, author of Free Trade Nation
Author Biography
Francesco Boldizzoni is research fellow in economic history at the University of Bari and a life member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge. He is the author of Means and Ends: The Idea of Capital in the West, 1500-1970.
Table of Contents
Preface ix Chapter 1: Truth on the Cross Science and Ideology 1 Chapter 2: Economics with a Human Face? 18 Chapter 3: The Fanciful World of Clio 54 Chapter 4: The World We Have Lost Microeconomic History 87 Chapter 5: The World We Have Lost Macroeconomic Perspectives 120 Chapter 6: Building on the Past The Creative Power of History 138 References 173 Index 209
Review
"Most of Boldizzoni's examples of bad economic history are also examples of bad economics. There are no shortcuts to good work. The merit of this book is to remind us of that sad truth."--George Grantham, Journal of Economic History "[Boldizzoni's] sensible guidelines--which do not negate the importance of either theory or quantification--should become standard practice for historians who want to venture beyond their own discipline into the world of social science."--Michael B. Katz, Journal of American History "The Poverty of Clio is a forceful denunciation of the impact of economic reasoning and techniques in the study of economic history."--Richard A. Almeida, International Social Science Review "The Poverty of Clio is a vigorous polemic that convincingly points out the deficiencies of current economic history. It is an extremely learned book that draws on a wide array of research from different fields... [T]he book makes an important contribution to rethinking the state of the art and to--hopefully--realigning economic history more closely with general history."--Justus Nipperdey, European Review of History
Review Quote
"With impressive erudition and verve, Boldizzoni laments that much economic history has become a mere handmaiden of neoclassical economics. He seeks to reinvigorate its classic focus on how the economy unfolds in its social and cultural setting. Drawing on sophisticated and subtle European historiography such as the Annales school, he makes a vivid, detailed, and persuasive case. I highly recommend this sweeping and provocative study." --Mark Granovetter, Stanford University
Details ISBN0691144001 Author Francesco Boldizzoni Short Title POVERTY OF CLIO Publisher Princeton University Press Language English ISBN-10 0691144001 ISBN-13 9780691144009 Media Book Format Hardcover Year 2011 DEWEY 330.9 Imprint Princeton University Press Subtitle Resurrecting Economic History Place of Publication New Jersey Country of Publication United States Illustrations 4 line illus. Birth 1979 Series Princeton University Press Translated from English UK Release Date 2011-07-25 NZ Release Date 2011-07-25 US Release Date 2011-07-25 Pages 240 Publication Date 2011-07-25 Audience Tertiary & Higher Education AU Release Date 2011-10-03 We've got this
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