美国自由主义的重建,1865-1914

The Reconstruction of American Liberalism, 1865–1914. By Nancy Cohen. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 2002. Pp. xi, 318. $22.50, paper.

Journal of Economic History · 2002
被引 0
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

本书重新讲述了现代美国自由主义的起源,聚焦于镀金时代两代政治知识分子关于民主与资本主义关系的辩论,以及他们如何为新兴公司资本主义提供意识形态合法性。

Abstract

In this brief volume Nancy Cohen “offers a new narrative of the origins of modern American liberalism” (p. 4). As this agenda suggests, the book is primarily a history of political thought. Briefly, her argument is that the values and programs of Progressive Era corporate liberalism originated in the debates among two generations of Gilded Age political intellectuals. Men such as Edwin L. Godkin, David A. Wells, and Francis A. Walker represented the first generation in the immediate post–Civil War decades. These were not simply classical liberals but “the pioneering theorists of economic consolidation and the active liberal state” (p. 13). A second generation of liberals emerged around the American Economic Association in the 1880s and was led by economists such as Henry C. Adams, John B. Clark, Richard T. Ely, and Edwin R. A. Seligman. Initially more radical, this group was purged in the 1880s, often with the aid of their older colleagues. Together these two generations “confronted the problem of the relationship between democracy and capitalism” (p. 15), and they provided “ideological legitimization of the novel economic, political and social relationships attendant on the rise of corporate capitalism.”

美国自由主义重建镀金时代政治思想公司自由主义起源进步时代自由主义