£46.00

University of Virginia Press The Problem of Profit: Finance and Feeling in Eighteenth-Century British Literature

Price data last checked 76 day(s) ago - refreshing...

View at Amazon

Price History & Forecast

Last 15 days • 15 data points (No recent data available)

Historical
Generating forecast...
£46.00 £40.69 £41.85 £43.01 £44.16 £45.32 £46.48 26 January 2026 29 January 2026 02 February 2026 05 February 2026 09 February 2026

Price Distribution

Price distribution over 15 days • 2 price levels

Days at Price
Current Price
8 days 7 days · current 0 2 4 6 8 £41 £46 Days at Price

Price Analysis

Most common price: £41 (8 days, 53.3%)

Price range: £41 - £46

Price levels: 2 different prices over 15 days

Description

Attacks against the pursuit of profit in eighteenth-century Britain have been largely read as reactions against market activity in general or as critiques of financial innovation. In The Problem of Profit, however, Michael Genovese contends that such rejections of profit derive not from a distaste for moneymaking itself but from a distaste for individualism. In the aftermath of the late seventeenth-century Financial Revolution, literature linked the concept of sympathy to the public-minded economic ideals of the past to resist the rising individualism of capitalism. This study places literary works at the center of eighteenth-century debates about how to harmonize exchanges of feeling and exchanges of finance, highlighting representations of communitarian, affective profit-making in georgic poetry as well as in the work of Joseph Addison, Daniel Defoe, Richard Steele, Sarah Fielding, Henry Fielding, David Hume, Samuel Johnson, and Laurence Sterne, among others. Investigating commercial treatises, novels, poetry, periodicals, and philosophy, Genovese argues that authors conjured alternatives to private accumulation that might counter the isolating tendencies of impersonal exchange. However, even as emotional language and economic language arose together in the 1700s, the attendant aspiration to form a communitarian economy in Britain was not fulfilled. By recovering an approach to moneymaking that failed to thrive, The Problem of Profit argues for the relevance of an unfamiliar narrative of capitalistic thought to today’s anxiety over the discord between personal ambition and public good.

Product Specifications

Format
Hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
30 November 2019
Listed Since
23 March 2019

Barcode

No barcode data available