Book Details

Accounting for Capitalism : The World the Clerk Made
This is a big story, told through an ostensibly marginal event: the birth of a class of “merchant clerks” in the United States in the middle of the nineteenth century. The personal trajectory of these young men from farm to metropolis, homestead to boarding house, and, most significantly, from growing things to selling them exemplified the enormous social effort required to domesticate the profit motive and turn it into the practical foundation of civic life. As Zakim reveals in his highly original study, there was nothing natural or preordained about the stunning ascendance of this capitalism and its radical transformation of the relationship between “Man and Mammon.”
Introduction: The Clerk Problem
1 Paperwork
2 Market Society
3 Self-Making Men
4 Desk Diseases
5 Counting Persons, Counting Profits
Conclusion: White Collar
Notes
Index

Democracy and Prosperity: : Reinventing Capitalism through a Turbulent Century
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