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Roots of Western Finance - by Thomas K Park & James B Greenberg (Hardcover)

Roots of Western Finance - by  Thomas K Park & James B Greenberg (Hardcover) - 1 of 1
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About this item

Highlights

  • The Roots of Western Finance takes an anthropological approach to origins of western finance and credit in ancient societies, covering a period from ancient Mesopotamia to the Islamic world in the eleventh century.
  • About the Author: Thomas K. Park is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona.
  • 304 Pages
  • Social Science, Anthropology

Description



About the Book



The Roots of Western Finance takes an anthropological approach to origins of western finance and credit in ancient societies, covering a period from ancient Mesopotamia to the Islamic world in the eleventh century. The authors reveal that credit is not simply an economic tra...



Book Synopsis



The Roots of Western Finance takes an anthropological approach to origins of western finance and credit in ancient societies, covering a period from ancient Mesopotamia to the Islamic world in the eleventh century. The authors reveal that credit is not simply an economic transaction; it is a social relationship and a technology of power.



Review Quotes




Finance, debt, and repayment are a dynamic and creative--but also sometimes destructive--feature of societies, past and present. Besides the fascination of the ancient case studies in this book, the authors show that debt can be integrated into a well-regulated social whole rather than being allowed to run amok. The result is an important and perceptive work.

Professors Park and Greenberg show that the continual transformations which led to the modern financial system have been motivated, among others, by a special set of ethical principles. They examine the role of these ethical components in the archetypal credit transactions of Mesopotamia, and thereafter in ancient Egypt, classical Greece, Rome, and in the view of what is just and equitable in early Judeo-Christian and Islamic law and finance. This remarkable volume contributes much comparative data and analysis in support of what a growing number of interdisciplinary social science researchers, including this writer, hold as universal truths.

The Roots of Western Finance presents a sweeping panorama of financial history in the ancient world, yet remains analytically precise. It is an intellectual and scholarly tour de force. Drawing on the best scholarly work available, and on the authors' own linguistic skills, they develop original interpretations of ancient records to describe the ways that finance and credit evolved out of ethical systems and beliefs about justice--showing that these latter were more significant than any pressures from markets--indeed, markets as we know them often did not even exist! But ethics and justice did, and provided the basis for the development of finance.

This first work is part of an ambitious two volume enterprise in which Park and Greenberg lay out an intensive and extensive narrative of the ancient economic worlds of credit from ancient Mesopotamia through Ancient Egypt to Classical Athens and the Early Republic of Rome though the social networking and finance that was followed by the Christian and Islamic worlds. Focusing on the "Hidden Interests" embedded within social and economic relationships of these ancient enterprises and their institutional forms and practices, Park and Greenberg have provided an astonishingly well-crafted treatise using an array of documentation from legal agreements to personal negotiations between parties and from the use of labor to long-distance trade contracts. As the authors' state unequivocally: "Norms of commercial and financial behavior in the ancient world were increasingly constrained by a judicial structure that followed predictable and well formulated rules and procedures that required explicit specifications in formal contracts. Yet, as in earlier and later societies, they were also constrained by customary expectations about honorable, not just legal, behavior." From these ancient sources, the narrative explicitly supports the main contention that social beings did not behave in exclusively self-centered ways but instead such a credo was a mythic construction of the twentieth century. I look forward to their second volume in which these "hidden interests" are examined in both Europe and North Africa by focusing on the role of social capital and ethical thought in financial systems.



About the Author



Thomas K. Park is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona.

James B. Greenberg is professor of anthropology and senior research anthropologist at the University of Arizona.

Dimensions (Overall): 9.1 Inches (H) x 6.1 Inches (W) x .9 Inches (D)
Weight: 1.1 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 304
Genre: Social Science
Sub-Genre: Anthropology
Publisher: Lexington Books
Theme: General
Format: Hardcover
Author: Thomas K Park & James B Greenberg
Language: English
Street Date: May 24, 2017
TCIN: 1005136207
UPC: 9781498545815
Item Number (DPCI): 247-27-9521
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported

Shipping details

Estimated ship dimensions: 0.9 inches length x 6.1 inches width x 9.1 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 1.1 pounds
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