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Veblen

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A bold new biography of the thinker who demolished accepted economic theories in order to expose how people of economic and social privilege plunder their wealth from society's productive men and women.
Thorstein Veblen was one of America's most penetrating analysts of modern capitalist society. But he was not, as is widely assumed, an outsider to the social world he acidly described. Veblen overturns the long-accepted view that Veblen's ideas, including his insights about conspicuous consumption and the leisure class, derived from his position as a social outsider.
In the hinterlands of America's Midwest, Veblen's schooling coincided with the late nineteenth-century revolution in higher education that occurred under the patronage of the titans of the new industrial age. The resulting educational opportunities carried Veblen from local Carleton College to centers of scholarship at Johns Hopkins, Yale, Cornell, and the University of Chicago, where he studied with leading philosophers, historians, and economists. Afterward, he joined the nation's academic elite as a professional economist, producing his seminal books The Theory of the Leisure Class and The Theory of Business Enterprise. Until late in his career, Veblen was, Charles Camic argues, the consummate academic insider, engaged in debates about wealth distribution raging in the field of economics.
Veblen demonstrates how Veblen's education and subsequent involvement in those debates gave rise to his original ideas about the social institutions that enable wealthy Americans—a swarm of economically unproductive "parasites"—to amass vast fortunes on the backs of productive men and women. Today, when great wealth inequalities again command national attention, Camic helps us understand the historical roots and continuing reach of Veblen's searing analysis of this "sclerosis of the American soul."

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 28, 2020
      Camic (coeditor, Social Knowledge in the Making), a sociology professor at Northwestern University, uncovers the intellectual roots of Thorstein Veblen’s economic theories in this detailed yet underwhelming biography. Raised on a Minnesota farm by Norwegian immigrants, Veblen (1857–1929) is frequently described as a social misfit whose outsider status gave him the vantage point he’d use to critique Gilded Age excesses and upend prevailing notions about labor, capital, and consumption in his 1899 The Theory of the Leisure Class. Camic persuasively disputes this portrayal, revealing Veblen as an academic insider educated and employed by some of America’s most elite universities, where his thinking was shaped by leading scholars of the day. Camic details the emergence of economics as an academic field in the late 19th century, and delves into the theories of economists John Bates Clark and James Laurence Laughlin, sociologist Herbert Spencer, historians Moses Coit Tyler and Herbert Tuttle, and other thinkers who influenced Veblen’s work. Yet in placing Veblen so firmly among his peers, Camic somewhat obscures his subject, offering little insight, for instance, into the sources of Veblen’s indifference to social conventions (his third extramarital affair got him fired from Stanford University). Readers not already well-versed in Veblen’s life and work won’t walk away from this with a very clear portrait of the man behind the theories.

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  • English

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