ABSTRACT

Mercantilism and accounting remain two dynamic and debated concepts in terms of definition and scope. This volume brings together the research of international scholars from a wide variety of disciplines – accounting, anthropology, native studies, economic geography, economic history and management – to reflect on alternative approaches to the study of these concepts.

This book focuses particularly on how individuals across space and time negotiated and navigated systems of exchange and trade, especially when confronted with world views and cultural systems that conflicted with and disrupted perceptions of their own. Through this, the volume offers a helpful reinforcement to the view that the analysis of mercantilism must be more highly contextualised to time and place, along with deeper focus on the local actors involved. It is these local actors who negotiated, exchanged and navigated differing world views and who enable us to tease out the longer-run global economic and social processes and the impacts of these encounters.

Complementing the growing interest in mercantilism, Indigenous studies and the relationships between colonists, traders and their counterparts in colonies and trading ports, this work provides a cross disciplinary examination of the subject area. Furthermore, it encourages a renewed interest in the use of archival documents and documentary sources in novel and innovative ways.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Mercantilism and accounting across space and time

part I|38 pages

Pre-market intermediaries and Indigenous players

chapter 2|15 pages

‘But whatever were the honey in the mouth of that beast of trade, there was a deadly sting in the tail’

New Netherland’s monetary policy and the Coastal Algonquian pragmatic response during the seventeenth century

part III|106 pages

Production, consumption and management of the colonial economy

chapter 5|42 pages

Glimpses of an Indigenous economy

Patterns of consumption and production of Indigenous peoples in the nineteenth-century fur trade and whaling industry

chapter 6|21 pages

Economic intelligence and fur trade management by the Hudson’s Bay Company

An examination of district reports in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries

chapter 8|15 pages

Conclusion

Accounting, money and mercantilism in European exchange, 1500–1900