ABSTRACT

Adam Smith’s An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations was the product of the rich tradition of the Scottish Enlightenment but the book’s fame immediately spread across the whole of Europe. This book looks at the long journey of Smith’s ideas from Scotland to peninsular Spain, reconstructing in detail the reception, adaptation, interpretation, and application of Smith's central concepts from 1777 up to 1840.

In light of methodological advances during the last two decades in the history of economic thought and the studies on the late Spanish Enlightenment and early Liberalism, the book tackles a series of significant issues and gaps in the historiography. In particular: this book sheds new light on the role of France as an intermediate step as the ideas spread from Britain southwards; the analysis draws not just on translations but also handwritten materials, book reviews, syntheses, summaries, plagiarism and rebuttals; a wide range of methods of dissemination are considered including the printing press and periodicals, parliamentary debates, academic chairs and societies; the role of individual translators and agents is given due prominence; the political interpretations of the Wealth of Nations and the ways in which the book was incorporated into the work of Spanish economists in the decades following publication are also considered.

This book marks a significant contribution to the literature on the reception of Smith’s Wealth of Nations, studies of the Spanish Enlightenment and history of economic thought more broadly.

chapter 1|8 pages

Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations in Spain

A state of the art

part Section I|92 pages

Translations

chapter 2|17 pages

Smith, Campomanes and a networked translator

John Geddes and the early history of English print in Spain

chapter 3|13 pages

Vicente Alcalá-Galiano

An interpretation of Smith between the public sphere and the state apparatus

chapter 5|22 pages

The first complete Spanish translation of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations

José Alonso Ortiz's Riqueza de las naciones (1794)

chapter 6|22 pages

José Alonso Ortiz, Adam Smith's translator

A new interpretation

part Section II|54 pages

Influences

chapter 7|18 pages

Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations

The first Spanish readings, 1777–1800

chapter 8|17 pages

Nuancing Adam Smith

The Wealth of Nations' reception and influences in Spain, 1800–1820