Republicanism and the French Revolution reassesses Jean-Baptiste Say's political economy by locating the author's ideas amidst the intellectual upheavals of Old Regime and revolutionary France. Traditionally Say has been portrayed as a rather staid figure, the archetypal liberal and classical political economist devoted to Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations. This study reveals the historic Say to have been altogether different; a passionate and committed republican intellectual and French patriot, he was as opposed to Britain's constitution, commerce, and political culture as he was to Bonaparte's First Empire. The relationship between Say's political thought and political economy, evinced in the full range of his writings from 1789 to 1832, is scrutinized for the first time, elucidating the true origins of his republicanism. This derived from a rich seam of political speculation among French and Genevan radicals concerning the possibility of transforming large and corrupt monarchies into modern republics whose political culture was characterized by commerce and virtue. By the 1790s such ideas had come to define the French Revolution itself, at once promising to restore French greatness and replace Britain as the leading cultural force in Europe. Say looked back to such luminaries as Diderot, Gibbon, and Franklin as members of the modern republican Pantheon and dedicated his life to formulating a political economy that would persuade legislators and ordinary citizens to embrace the republican creed.
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This reassessment of Jean-Baptiste Say's political economy locates his ideas amidst the intellectual upheavals of Old Regime and revolutionary France. Traditionally portrayed as the archetypal liberal and classical political economist, Say was, Whatmore argues, altogether different.
Les mer
PART I. REINTERPRETING SAY; PART II THE INTELLECTUAL CONTEXT OF SAY'S IDEAS; PART III REPUBLICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY; PART IV REPUBLICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY IN CONDITIONS OF MONARCHY
Whatmore advances his clear and closely argued interpretation of Say through a most impressive range of textual evidence ... This accomplished book will prove challenging and instructive to an extremely wide circle of historians of ideas.
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`Whatmore's observations are illuminating' William Baumol, Department of Economics, New York University, EH.NET `an important contribution to a much bigger field ... this takes us into the entire background of French Revolutionary republicanism' Richard Whatmore, TLS
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A thorough reinterpretation of the life and writings of Jean-Baptiste Say
1989-90, Joseph Hodges Choate Memorial Fellow, Harvard University
A thorough reinterpretation of the life and writings of Jean-Baptiste Say

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199241156
Publisert
2000
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
1 gr
Høyde
244 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
262

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

1989-90, Joseph Hodges Choate Memorial Fellow, Harvard University