ABSTRACT

Adam Smith is well recognized as the forefather of modern economics, but his success can be attributed not only to what he wrote but also to his use of language. In this exciting new book, Willie Henderson shows how Smith engaged creatively in writing about the economy, and analyzes the extent to which he tried to ensure that the reader is drawn into the text and informed by it.

Demonstrating analysis methods that are helpful to new researchers on Smith’s works, Evaluating Adam Smith sets his work in the cultural context of the eighteenth century and explores the lexical and conceptual inter-relations between Smith and the sources he consulted. Issues explored include Smith’s use of irony and his work in the context of wealth, virtue and happiness as presented in the Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations.

Henderson’s informative study employs the literary techniques of close reading and close textual analysis and applies them to sustained passages of Smith’s writing.

chapter 2|17 pages

How does Smith achieve a synthesis in writing?

Evidence from his analysis of the propensity to truck, barter and exchange 1

chapter 3|19 pages

Nature's dupes

Irony and economic agency in Smith's writing

chapter 4|16 pages

The political economy of Castle Rackrent

Maria Edgeworth and Adam Smith 1

chapter 6|17 pages

A very cautious, or a very polite, Dr Smith?

Hedging in the Wealth of Nations

chapter 7|20 pages

Natural and human institutions

Reading for argumentation in book three of the Wealth of Nations

chapter 8|17 pages

Adam Smith's construction of ‘History' and ‘Story'

The analysis of primogeniture