War Movies and Economics

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506th Parachute Infantry Regiment
Battle Maps
behavioural economics warfare
bureaucracy theory application
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Dike's Inability
Dike’s Inability
Dirty Dozen
Dunkirk Evacuation
Early 1920s Early 1930s
Easy Company
Economic Education Literature
economic incentives conflict
economic principles
economics
economics in historical war films
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film
Flying Fortress
game theory
Germany's Production
Germany’s Production
incentives
limited resources
Lone Survivor
Marcus Licinius Crassus
Memphis Belle
military conflict
military decision analysis
Northeastern Afghanistan
Pickle Barrel
pop culture
Pow Camp
public goods provision
resource allocation strategies
scarcity
Schindler's List
Schindler’s List
Sequential Game
Servile War
St Platoon
strategic moves
Suppressive Fire
Taliban Militia
Ultimatum Game
USAAF Fighter
World War Ii Movie

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367275617
  • Weight: 240g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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War Movies and Economics: Lessons from Hollywood’s Adaptations of Military Conflict applies ongoing research in the relatively new genre of economics in popular media to Hollywood’s war movies. Whether inadvertently or purposefully, these movies provide numerous examples of how economic principles often play an important role in military conflict.

The authors of the chapters included in this edited collection work to illustrate economics lessons portrayed in adaptations such as Band of Brothers, Conspiracy, The Dirty Dozen, Dunkirk, Memphis Belle, Saving Private Ryan, Schindler’s List, Spartacus, Stalag 17, and Valkyrie. Aspects of these stories show how key economic principles of scarcity, limited resources, and incentives play important roles in military conflict. The movies also provide an avenue for discussion of the economics of public goods provision, the modern economic theory of bureaucracy, and various game-theoretic concepts such as strategic moves and commitment devices. Where applicable, lessons from closely related fields such as management are also provided.

This book is ideal reading for students of economics looking for an approachable route to understanding basic principles of economics and game theory. It is also accessible to amateur and professional historians, and any reader interested in popular culture as it relates to television, movies, and military history.

Laura J. Ahlstrom is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Oklahoma State University, USA.

Franklin G. Mixon, Jr. is the Violet Litchfield and Thomas Bryant Buck Jr. Professor of Economics, and Director of the Center for Economic Education, at Columbus State University, USA.