ABSTRACT

Drawing on an interdisciplinary panel of contributors, this book presents a stimulating dialogue between economics and art theory and considers how this might aid our understanding of both areas of research.

The collection explores themes which both fields share, including rationality, abstraction and model building, the nature of social reality, representation and transformation. The contributions employ a broad range of methods to investigate the links between economics and art, and their coverage includes architecture, history of ideas, art theory, literature studies and beyond.

This innovative volume will be of interest to advanced students and scholars of economic theory, cultural economics, literary and art theory and it intends to be a starting point for new avenues of interdisciplinary research.

part I|61 pages

Economics, literature and representation

chapter 1|16 pages

Economic thought and novels

What can we expect from the economy?

chapter 2|25 pages

Men of feeling

Sympathy, imagination and the value of interdisciplinary exchange

chapter 3|18 pages

Adamantios Koraes and his tropics of discourse

Art, science and economics as therapeutic debts

part II|74 pages

Economics, visual arts and abstractions

chapter 4|24 pages

Economy, efficiency and the promenade deck

Thoughts on the history of architectural theory

chapter 5|25 pages

Resemblances and disjunctions

Art, mathematics and economic models 1

part III|57 pages

Reflections on economics, society and art

chapter 7|22 pages

Art as experience

The aesthetic dimensions of meta-economic concerns in E. F. Schumacher's work

chapter 8|20 pages

“Man, the Prisoner of Logic”

Toward an optics of equanimity