The Social Life of Money in the English Past
The Social Life of Money in the English Past
Author: Valenze, Deborah (Barnard College, New York)
England
Published on 8 May 2006 by CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS in the United Kingdom.
Paperback / softback | 326 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
228 x 154 | 441g
In an age when authoritative definitions of currency were in flux and small change was scarce, money enjoyed a rich and complex social life. Deborah Valenze shows how money became involved in relations between people in ways that moved beyond what we understand as its purely economic functions. This highly original investigation covers the formative period of commercial and financial development in England between 1630 and 1800. In a series of interwoven essays, Valenze examines religious prohibitions related to avarice, early theories of political economy and exchange practices of the Atlantic economy. In applying monetary measurements to women, servants, colonial migrants, and local vagrants, this era was distinctive in its willingness to blur boundaries between people and things. Lucid and highly readable, the book revises the way we see the advance of commercial society at the threshold of modern capitalism.
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