Fr. 158.00

Nineteenth-Century Individualism and the Market Economy - Individualist Themes in Emerson, Thoreau, and Sumner

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book studies nineteenth-century American individualism and its relationship to the simultaneous rise of the market economy as articulated in the works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and William Graham Sumner.  The argument of the book is that these thinkers offer distinct visions of individualism that reflect their respective understandings of the market, and provide thoughtful and insightful perspectives upon the promise and peril of this economic and social order. Looking back to Emerson, Thoreau, and Sumner furnishes valuable insights about the history of American political and social thought, as well as about the complexity of one of the most basic and prevalent relationships of modern life: that between the individual and the institutional complex of the market.

List of contents

1. Introduction: A Nation of Individuals and Markets.- 2. The Rise of the Market: Individuation and Integration in Antebellum America.- 3. Emerson and Self-Reliance: Individualism Amidst the Market.- 4. Thoreau and Deliberate Living: Individualism Against the Market.- 5. The Maturation of the Market: Industrial Society in the Gilded Age.- 6. Sumner and Natural Struggle: Individualism Through the Market.- 7. Conclusion: Our Nineteenth-Century Inheritance.

About the author










Luke Philip Ploticais Assistant Professor of Political Science at Virginia Tech, USA with training in political theory and public law. 

Summary

This book studies nineteenth-century American individualism and its relationship to the simultaneous rise of the market economy as articulated in the works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and William Graham Sumner.  The argument of the book is that these thinkers offer distinct visions of individualism that reflect their respective understandings of the market, and provide thoughtful and insightful perspectives upon the promise and peril of this economic and social order. Looking back to Emerson, Thoreau, and Sumner furnishes valuable insights about the history of American political and social thought, as well as about the complexity of one of the most basic and prevalent relationships of modern life: that between the individual and the institutional complex of the market.

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