Description
Book SynopsisAs the transition from socialism to a market economy gathered speed in the early 1990s, many people proclaimed the final success of capitalism as a practice and neoliberal economics as its accompanying science.
Trade Review “The volume features contributions from an impressive array of scholars operating at the borders between anthropology, sociology, and economics, and offers much to interest scholars from each of these disciplines.” · JRAI
Table of Contents Preface
Stephen Gudeman
Chapter 1. Introduction
Stephen Gudeman
Chapter 2. Simplicity in economic anthropology: Persuasion, form and substance
James G. Carrier
Chapter 3. The concept of interest as rhetoric – or as a useful social science concept?
Richard Swedberg
Chapter 4. The new social science imperialism and the problem of knowledge in contemporary economics
William Milberg
Chapter 5. The persuasions of economics
Stephen Gudeman
Chapter 6. Conversations between anthropologists and economists
Metin Cosgel
Chapter 7. “The craving for intelligibility:” Speech and silence on the economy under structural adjustment and military rule in Nigeria
Jane Guyer with LaRay Denzer
Chapter 8. Mass-gifts: On gifts in advanced capitalist markets
Nurit Bird-David and Asaf Darr
Chapter 9. The persuasive power of money
Keith Hart
Chapter 10. The money rhetoric in the United States
Ruben George Oliven
Chapter 11. The third way: A cultural economic perspective
Arjo Klamer
Bibliography
Index