Imperial Germany and the Industrial Revolution

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A01=Thorstein Veblen
Author_Thorstein Veblen
Baltic Culture
Baltic Littoral
Business Enterprise
Category=KCZ
Category=KN
comparative economic systems
Conferred
Conspicuous Waste
cultural divergence analysis
Defensive Offense
Dim
Dynastic Establishment
Dynastic State
economic modernization theory
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Follow
German social structure
Handicraft System
historical sociology research
Imperial Germany
Incline
Industrial Arts
Industrial Efficiency
industrialization impact studies
Make Up
Notoriety
origins of German economic efficiency
Pagan Antiquity
Popular Autonomy
Spokesmen
Superstitious Conceits
Warlike Enterprise
Wasteful Consumption
Wo
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780887388354
  • Weight: 498g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 1990
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Although Imperial Germany was begun before the United States entered World War I, little in the book however relates to that particular conflict. Rather, this is in large part a study of the divergencies in cultural development between the English-speaking peoples and the German-speaking peoples, and of the consequences this produced in economic and social spheres. Suppressed by war censors, Imperial Germany was again released after the war, and has assumed a place as a major contribution to economics and sociology alike.

The comments on the book have scarcely been altered by time. Charles A. Beard noted that "Veblen wrote for the centuries, not for the days, and his Imperial Germany ranks with his immortal Theory of Business Enterprise." Wesley C. Mitchell, reflecting on the book during World War II, wrote that "the natural causes that made Imperial Germany efficient are still at work under the Nazi regime, and the forecast that proved sound once may do so again." Lewis Mumford called Imperial Germany "still the best picture of the residual barbarisms in German civilization; the soil out of which Nazism grew."

This new edition is graced with a brilliant and insightful opening essay that is at once a commentary on Veblen's volume, and a statement of the historic status of the German economy and society. Written by Otto G. Mayer, director in a leading German "Think Tank," HWWA-Institut fur Wirtschaftsforschung-Hamburg, editor of Intereconomics, a journal issued in English, and an author of major policy statements on economic and social issues, the new opening statement underscores the view of those who came before, that Veblen's book is "a treasure chest of knowledge."

Thorsten B. Veblen.  Otto G. Mayer is director in a leading German 'Think Tank', HWWA- Institut fur Wirtschaftsforschung-Hamburg.

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