Article ID: CBB002251250

"Money is not a Pledge": Early Financial Genres, the Battle of the Banks, and John Law's Money and Trade Considered (2020)

unapi

A rhetorical analysis of bank proposals during the English financial revolution suggests that the discipline of economics and the modern willingness to trust its universally rational appeals grew from roots in specific historical exigencies that led financial projectors to craft appeals to partisan and divided audiences. Two features of the bank proposal genre—the plain style and abstraction—were perfected in John Law's Money and Trade Considered (1705), still read today as a work of economic theory. Analyzing Law's work in the context of other proposals and in the broader context of the financial revolution demonstrates the rhetorical foundation of modern economics.

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Authors & Contributors
Hess, Volker
Berenson, Edward
Coleman, Charly
Daniel Luban
Rosenthal, Jean-Laurent
Jackson, Trevor
Journals
Medizinhistorisches Journal
Social Studies of Science
Intellectual History Review
History of Political Economy
History of European Ideas
French Historical Studies
Publishers
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
State University of New York at Buffalo
University of Chicago Press
Princeton University Press
Irish Academic Press
Hong Kong University Press
Concepts
Economics
Banks and banking
Rhetorical analysis
Money
Currency; coinage; monetary systems
Political economy
People
Law, John (1671–1729)
Mandeville, Bernard de
Smith, Adam
Hayek, Friedrich August von
Darwin, Charles Robert
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
20th century
17th century
Modern
Enlightenment
Places
France
United States
Great Britain
Atlantic world
Guangzhou (China)
England
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