Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by Ann Fabian. By University of California Press.
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No comments about The Unvarnished Truth: Personal Narratives in Nineteenth-Century America.
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by Pascal James Imperato and Eleanor M. Imperato. By Rutgers University Press.
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No comments about They Married Adventure: The Wandering Lives of Martin and Osa Johnson.
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by Lucia Stanton. By The University of North Carolina Press.
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No comments about Free Some Day: The African-American Families of Monticello.
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. By BiblioBazaar.
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No comments about Eighty Years and More: Reminiscences 1815-1897.
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by Mary Haskin Parker Richards. By Utah State University Press.
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No comments about Winter Quarters: The 1846-1848 Life Writings of Mary Haskin Parker Richards (Life Writings of Frontier Women, Vol 1).
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by William Henry Seward. By Kessinger Publishing.
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No comments about Life of John Quincy Adams.
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
By Alaska Northwest Books.
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No comments about Sleeping Lady (Anniversary).
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by John Preston Sheffey. By Louisiana State University Press.
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No comments about Soldier Of Southwestern Virginia: The Civil War Letters Of Captain John Preston Sheffey.
Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by Roy C. Smith. By St. Martin's Griffin.
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2 comments about Adam Smith and the Origins of American Enterprise: How the Founding Fathers Turned to a Great Economist's Writings and Created the American Economy.
- Roy C. Smith offers a readable, straight-forward, right-of-center review of the famous economist, Adam Smith. The book introduces Smith's thoughts in basic detail, and spends a great deal of time putting Smith in the context of the American revolution, which of course is when "The Wealth of Nations" was published, in 1776. At times the history seems to drown-out the thems of Adam Smith's contribution, but by the conclusion the author ties up his thesis that Adam Smith's thought had a pervasive and substantial impact on the Founding Fathers, and upon the way Americans have done busness since then. A good read for introductory or undergraduate readers. Author's focus remains on Smith and American context. Little mention of John Maynard Keynes is made, and no discusion of Marx or socialism as a competing alternative. This did not detract from book, as plenty of other books and articles speak to those subjects.
- R Smith is certainly correct that Hamilton,Washington,Madison,Franklin,etc.,had either read the Wealth of Nations(WN,1776) or were familiar with its point of view.Of course,these individuals formed the Federalists.They were the real thing as far as genuine conservatism is concerned.They were opposed by the Anti Federalsts(Mason,Randolph,Henry,Paine,Jefferson,etc.)who took their cue from the work of J B Say.These individuals are not conservatives.They are libertarians.It is this group that believed in laissez faire,opposed all tariffs,opposed a uniform currency,opposed the creation of a central bank to control the problematic behavior of private commercial banks,opposed the creation of a strong federal government,opposed giving the federal government the power to tax,etc.R Smith has obviously not read the Wealth of Nations in its entirety because the real Adam Smith favored overall progressive taxes,supported both revenue and retaliatory tariffs,supported extensive public goods and works spending by a democratically elected government(as opposed to the " Government" tyranny of George III.R Smith badly misrepresents Smith's views here),had a very clear understanding of free market failure,externalities and spillover effects,the need to prevent any bank loans from going to projectors(J M Keynes's rentiers and speculators),prodigals,and imprudent risk takers,the need to fix the rate of interest in the long run permanently at a low level a little bit above the prime rate,the skewing of loans to the sober middle class entrepreneurs who would use the loans to create productive jobs and not leveraged buyouts ,dot com frauds,and subprime scams, and the importance of making sure that all individuals had an education and religious instruction that would be provided free of charge by the state if they were unable to pay for such education themselves.There is no substantial discussion of any of these Smithian topics anywhere in R Smith's book.R Smith appears to believe that Adam Smith was a libertarian.Nothing could be further from the truth.The interested reader is encouraged to read pp.280-340,especially Smith's summary on pp.339-340,434-439,681-690,716-768,and 794-795 of the Modern Library(Cannan)edition of the WN to discover the real Adam Smith.You will not find him in this book.
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Posted in United States Historical (Saturday, August 30, 2008)
Written by James M. Williams. By University Alabama Press.
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No comments about From That Terrible Field: The Civil War Letters of James M. Williams, 21st Alabama Infantry Volunteers.
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