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stereotypes

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Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2021) 53 (2): 313–345.
Published: 01 April 2021
... not be read as a scholarly contribution to Jewish economic history. Flirting with stereotypes, Friedman was not looking to be theoretically sound and correct, but to persuade his audiences of the virtues of the free market. We therefore argue that “Capitalism and the Jews” has to be read within...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2000) 32 (4): 833–856.
Published: 01 November 2000
... and Reder / Anti-Semitism of Eminent Economists 839 the withering contempt displayed in his depiction of the Shylock-imaged FrenchJewishminister, Louis-Lucien Klotz (Keynes 1949, 60–62). It might be mentioned that in this memoir Keynes displays to the fullest his penchant for the pejorative stereotype...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (4): 784–785.
Published: 01 November 2003
... shifting the terms of trade (notably in his Galton Lecture). Toye is on shakier ground in trying to make much of Keynes’s occasional casual expression of anti-Semitic stereotypes then prevalent among the English upper classes (and also in a digression asserting that H. G. Wells was free...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (4): 785–787.
Published: 01 November 2003
... in the birth control movement, and Keynes’s recantation of neo-Malthusian worries about expanding population shifting the terms of trade (notably in his Galton Lecture). Toye is on shakier ground in trying to make much of Keynes’s occasional casual expression of anti-Semitic stereotypes then prevalent...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2012) 44 (1): 41–67.
Published: 01 March 2012
.... Although in their personal dealings each of these individuals had apparent positive regard for individual Jewish colleagues, and even friends (e.g., Keynes and Kahn), their utterances are character- ized by what Reder called anti-Semitic stereotyping at least, and political anti-Semitic...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (4): 685–686.
Published: 01 November 2003
... were characterized by what Reder called anti-Semitic stereotyping at least, and political anti- Semitic argumentation at worst. It is with respect to Reder’s discussion of Hayek that that “contro- versy” erupted, both publicly and privately. Publicly, a response by Ronald Hamowy appeared...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2024) 56 (5): 947–949.
Published: 01 October 2024
...), and the theoretical dominance of cameralism, especially as embodied in the works of Joseph von Sonnenfels (1732–1817). Adler's contribution is precisely to show that this stereotypical perspective misses crucial theoretical and institutional processes in the preceding decades. Zinzendorf's life story is weaved around...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1978) 10 (3): 505–506.
Published: 01 September 1978
..., with considerable plausibility, is that the received stereotypes of the Enlightenment are much more approximate than we had perhaps supposed. Professor Reill has examined the historical thought of the German En- lightenment more thoroughly than any former scholar. The choice of subject...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2005) 37 (2): 211–218.
Published: 01 June 2005
... was not predicting “gloom and doom.” These efforts at clarification and analysis are contained in a voluminous se- ries of pamphlets and articles that occupy several volumes (Wrigley and Souden 1986). A careful reading of these texts reveals a Malthus quite different from the stereotypical Malthus-as-a-pessimist...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1978) 10 (3): 504–505.
Published: 01 September 1978
...; and few realities are more complex than the relations between intellectual movements. But what The Germun Enlightenment and the Rise of Historicism demonstrates, with considerable plausibility, is that the received stereotypes of the Enlightenment are much more approximate than we had...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (4): 793–795.
Published: 01 November 2003
..., as he clearly recognizes that the outcomes of spontaneous processes are not always socially bene- ficial. Thus, in rescuing Smith from modern stereotypes, I do not think it is necessary to denigrate the invisible hand. Smith thought deeply about the processes that tend to promote social order...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1985) 17 (3): 496–498.
Published: 01 September 1985
... stereotype. His view of human nature may owe as much to Scottish Presbyterianism or to Mandeville as to Hutcheson or Shaftesbury. His doctrine of the ‘impartial spectator’ is more relativistic than the concept of ‘utility,’ with which he found himself disen- chanted. Nevertheless, there emerged...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (4): 789–791.
Published: 01 November 2003
... to make much of Keynes’s occasional casual expression of anti-Semitic stereotypes then prevalent among the English upper classes (and also in a digression asserting that H. G. Wells was free of such stereotypes). Anand Chandavarkar (2000, 1622) reports that “Keynes was the only non-Jewish member...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1997) 29 (2): 361–364.
Published: 01 June 1997
... twentieth-century gentile scholars: He had no difficulty fostering intimate intellectual relationships with individual Jewish schol- ars, often as teacher-mentor; at the same time, his view of Jews as a socioeconomic and cultural group was not very different from the crude stereotyping we associate...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2020) 52 (1): 201–204.
Published: 01 February 2020
... maximization in favor of rule-following conduct. Even more shocking is the reiteration of the dichotomy of self-interest and benevolence, as if the two cannot be complements rather than substitutes. For at least the last few decades, history of economics literature has aimed at dismantling that stereotype...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2007) 39 (Suppl_1): 195–214.
Published: 01 December 2007
... tendency for agriculture, which he kept forever after. (97; emphasis added) The idea that the innate qualities of the man of science manifested themselves at an early age constituted a common stereotype in academic eulogies (Roche 1978, 1:172, 175). Quesnay, as a would-be man of science, had...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1976) 8 (4): 575–578.
Published: 01 November 1976
... of myths and stereotypes.” He tells us the Classicals “attacked the dominant social classes of the time” (p. 14), they did not believe in a “natural harmony of interests” (p. 16), they did not rigidly oppose “all government intervention in the market” (p. 21), they “were not activated...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1980) 12 (3): 463–467.
Published: 01 September 1980
... be discovered in the original texts. Gandy contrasts the four historical phases stereotyped in ‘official Marxism’ with new Marxist historical studies that began appearing in the,. 1960s. In the standard texts, history moves from primitive communism throuih slavery and feudalism to capitalism...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1977) 9 (4): 476–489.
Published: 01 November 1977
.... E. “The Stereotypes of Classical Transfer Theory,” Journal of Political Economy 74 (Dec. 1956 ): 492 -506. McCulloch , J. R. “Fluctuations in the Supply and Value of Money,” Edinburgh Review 43 (Feb. 1826 ): 263 -98. Mill , J. S. Principles of Political Economy , ed...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1994) 26 (3): 529–537.
Published: 01 September 1994
... in Hungary’s Road to Capitalism. By Michael Burawoy and Janos Lukacs. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1992.2 15 pp. $24.95. This industry study demonstrates the possibility of capitalist and socio-bureaucratic stereotypes under the umbrella of conventional Marxist ideology...