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Mercantilism Reimagined Philip J. Stern (Assistant professor of history, Assistant professor of history, Duke University)

Mercantilism Reimagined By Philip J. Stern (Assistant professor of history, Assistant professor of history, Duke University)

Summary

Rethinking Mercantilism brings together a group of young early modern British and European historians to investigate what use the concept mercantilism might still hold for both scholars and teachers of the period.

Mercantilism Reimagined Summary

Mercantilism Reimagined: Political Economy in Early Modern Britain and Its Empire by Philip J. Stern (Assistant professor of history, Assistant professor of history, Duke University)

Rethinking Mercantilism brings together a group of young early modern British and European historians to investigate what use the concept mercantilism might still hold for both scholars and teachers of the period. While scholars often find the term unsatisfactory, mercantilism has stubbornly survived both in our classrooms and in the general scholarly discourse. These essays propose that it is largely impossible to rethink mercantilism, given its unique status as a non-entity, by looking for mercantilism itself. Economics as a discipline had not emerged by the seventeenth century, yet economic considerations were part of most intellectual pursuits, whether scientific, political, cultural, or social. Thus, the search for mercantilism is best undertaken through an investigation of how economic considerations were embedded in debates throughout the early modern intellectual landscape. With this in mind, this book seeks to rethink mercantilism inductively rather than deductively. Such an approach not only frees the debate from the strictures and assumptions of historiography reaching back to the Scottish Enlightenment, but also avoids viewing the period through the lens of modern economics. Exploring the period in its own terms makes it possible to revisit fruitfully and more holistically some of the traditional component parts of mercantilism such as the relationship between wealth and money, the modern state and commerce, economic and political thought, and power and prosperity only now informed and inflected by the questions raised in new approaches and trends to the intellectual, political, social, and cultural histories that populated the early modern world. The goal of this volume is not to abandon mercantilism as a concept but to rethink its intellectual and political content. First, rather than an ideology driven primarily by self-evident and narrow economic self-interest, mercantilism was inseparable from the rich transformations emerging out of the rapidly changing early modern intellectual landscape; as such, the study of mercantilism no longer appears solely as a subject of the history of economic thought, but part and parcel of early modern intellectual history more generally. Second, the book argues that the common vision of a mercantile system premised upon a coherent, strong, and expansive nation-state is unsustainable. The cornerstone of mercantilism has long been the assumption of a strong and coherent state apparatus with the authority to manage and manipulate the sphere of commerce for its own ends. This volume explores the implications on our understanding of early modern economic thought of the recent recognition among historians that the early modern state was rather weak, decentralized, and amorphous. Moreover, the fact that recent research has continually re-emphasized the role of a variety of political communities (not just the state, but also church, corporations, and communities of pirates and smugglers) in shaping public life recommends questioning which polities mercantilism sought to serve, and vice versa, at any given time. These and other questions will primarily be pursued in the English context, with occasional comparisons to the continental experience.

Mercantilism Reimagined Reviews

The eighteen essays in Merchantilism Re-imagined make very clear the multifaceted nature of political economy in early modern Britain, both in terms of ideas and practise. Some of the essays argue powerfully for emphasizing certain policies where balance of trade considerations were incedental. Thus there are important essays on the significance of population and labour to conceptions of economic potential and power ... The volume provides a good sense of how historians are now weaving together a wide range of factors when exploring the significance of economic policy as a reason of state. Most of the essays are rich, insightful and suggestive. * Julian Hoppit, The Time Literary Supplement *

About Philip J. Stern (Assistant professor of history, Assistant professor of history, Duke University)

Phiip J. Stern is Assistant Professor of History, Duke University Carl Wennerlind is Associate Professor of History, Barnard College

Table of Contents

List of Contributors ; Acknowledgments ; Introduction-Philip J. Stern and Carl Wennerlind ; Part 1: Circulation ; 1. Population: Modes of Seventeenth-Century Demographic Thought, Ted McCormick ; 2. Labor: Employment, Colonial Servitude, and Slavery in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic, Abigail Swingen ; 3. Money: Hartlibian Political Economy and the New Culture of Credit, Carl Wennerlind ; Part 2: Knowledge ; 4. Epistemology: Expertise and Knowledge in the World of Commerce, Thomas Leng ; 5. Natural History and Improvement: The Case of Tobacco, Fredrik Albritton Jonsson ; 6. Cameralism: A German Alternative to Mercantilism, Andre Wakefield ; Part 3: Institutions ; 7. Corporations: Humanism and Elizabethan Political Economy, Henry S. Turner ; 8. Companies: Monopoly, Sovereignty, and the British East Indies, Philip J. Stern ; 9. The Church: Anglicanism and the Nationalization of Maritime Space, Brent S. Sirota ; 10. Pirates and Smugglers: Political Economy in the Red Atlantic, Niklas Frykman ; Part 4: Regulation ; 11. Polycentric States: The Spanish Reigns and the Failures of Mercantilism, Regina Grafe ; 12. Financial Markets: The Limits of Economic Regulation in Early Modern England, Anne L. Murphy ; 13. Consumption: Commercial Demand and the Challenges to Regulatory Power in Eighteenth-Century Ireland, ; Martyn J. Powell ; Part 5: Conflict ; 14. War and Peace: Trade, International Competition, and Political Economy, John Shovlin ; 15. Neutrality: Atlantic Shipping in and after the Anglo-Dutch Wars, Victor Enthoven ; 16. Rivalry: Greatness in Early Modern Political Economy, Sophus A. Reinert ; Afterword: From Mercantilism to Macroeconomics-Craig Muldrew ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780199988532
9780199988532
0199988536
Mercantilism Reimagined: Political Economy in Early Modern Britain and Its Empire by Philip J. Stern (Assistant professor of history, Assistant professor of history, Duke University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2013-12-19
416
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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