History, Ethnography, Critique
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt The 48 Laws of Power av Robert Greene (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 521 kr"This is a 'big book', tackling big questions in deceptively simple prose." Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute "Both authors draw on their considerable ethnographic experience to offer a rich run-through of economic anthropology, and trace its intersection between the primary disciplines of economics and anthropology and against thematic currents such as Marxism and feminism." LSE Review of Books "Educational and intellectually stimulating, it will benefit both economic sociologists and economists." Revue Franaise de Socio-conomie "Offers a methodological and analytic platform which could make this field more relevant for policy making, create a more fruitful dialogue with economics, economic sociology and history, and make scholarly work more accessible to the wider public." European Economic Sociology Newsletter "Hann and Hart offer the most sophisticated history of economic anthropology that I have seen. Using a humanistic perspective, their descriptions of the 'prehistory' of economic anthropology and of the socialist and postsocialist eras are neatly joined to an account of research in the twentieth century." Stephen Gudeman, University of Minnesota "Now that neoliberal economic theories are becoming as discredited as state-socialist ones, Chris Hann and Keith Hart set out the case for 'human economics' focused on addressing both the moral and material needs of humanity - market as well as non-market. This is a brilliantly executed work which breathes new list into both disciplines - Anthropology and Economics. At a time when national and global economic thinking and policies seem moribund, this intervention could not be timlier." Don Robotham, City University of New York
Chris Hann is a Director at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle Keith Hart is Professor Emeritus at Goldsmiths, University of London
Preface Chapter 1 Introduction: Economic Anthropology Chapter 2 Economy from the Ancient World to the Age of the Internet Chapter 3 The Rise of Modern Economics and Anthropology Chapter 4 The Golden Age of Economic Anthropology Chapter 5 After the Formalist Substantivist Debate Chapter 6 Unequal Development Chapter 7 Socialism, Postsocialism and Reform Socialism Chapter 8 One-world Capitalism Chapter 9 Where Do We Go From Here? Bibliographical Notes References