Description
Book SynopsisPart I. Introduction.- Chapter 1. Introduction (Muriel Dal Pont Legrand).- Part II. A conversation with Richard Arena.- Chapter 2. “Economy, history and society: an embedded view". A conversation with Richard Arena (Sandye Gloria).- Part III. The Inspiring 19th.- Chapter 3. Sismondi: prices, markets, wealth and happiness (Pascal Bridel).- Chapter 4. Nineteenth-Century French Liberal Economists’ Reading of Ricardo through the Lenses of their Fear of Socialism (Nathalie Sigot).- Chapter 5. The exploitation of the globe and nature. The blind spot of environmental considerations in Saint Simonian Industrialism (Michel Bellet).- Chapter 6. Paths to a new historiographical territory: international crossings, visiting economists, travelling models (Annie L. Cot).- Chapter 7. Walras’ Economie Pure vs Marshall’s Economics? Some insights on economics as a social science (Katia Caldari).- Part IV: Interwar episodes.- Chapter 8. Hayek‘s Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle (Harald Hagemann).- Chapter 9. Corridor stability in early history of Macroeconomics (Michael Assous).- Chapter 10. When General Theory met French politics: the historical context of a translation (Ghislain Deleplace).- Chapter 11. Antonio de Viti de Marco’s painful’ retirement decision (Manuela Mosca).- Part V. Cambridge Economics and the Sraffa period.- Chapter 12. On some “new” interpretations of Ricardo’s principle of comparative advantages (Sergio Parrinello).- Chapter 13. The new turn in the debate on capital theory (Bertram Schefold).- Chapter 14. Sraffa on multiple-products processes of production: the case of joint production proper and of land of a single quality (Heinz D. Kurz and Neri Salvadori).- Chapter 15. The Rashomon Effect and the Sraffa-Marx Puzzle (Riccardo Bellofiore).- Chapter 16. Richard Arena on Sraffa and Wittgenstein (John Davis).- Chapter 17. On some aspects of Arena’s interpretation of Sraffa (Cristina Marcuzzo).