ABSTRACT

A rich vein of economics writings which runs through the nineteenth century and beyond is now largely ignored because its authors were women or because they favoured literary over scientific forms. Economics as Literature re-examines some of the most interesting texts from within this tradition.
The works considered include:
*stories (eg by Maria Edgeworth and Harriet Martineau)
*dialogues (eg by Jane Marcet and Thomas de Quincey)
*'imaginative' writing (eg from Ruskin and Francis Edgeworth)
*Keynes' General Theory which is locked within a nineteenth century 'tradition' of uniting science and art.

chapter 1|20 pages

Economics as literature

An introduction to ‘literary economics’

chapter 2|22 pages

Child's play

Maria Edgeworth and economics education

chapter 3|20 pages

Jane Marcet's Conversations on Political Economy

A new interpretation