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  1. The birth of economic competitiveness: Rejoinder to Breckman and Trägårdh.Liah Greenfeld - 1996 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 10 (3):409-470.
    Abstract In ?The Worth of Nations? I proposed that nationalism was a major factor in the emergence of the modem, growth?oriented economy. In response to criticisms, I demonstrate here the nationalistic inspiration of seventeenth?century English?or British?economic tracts. Urging a reconsideration of earlier approaches (such as that of W.W. Rostow) to the problem of why?rather than how?the modern economy emerged, I agree with Max Weber's challenge to the naturalness of our proclivity for constant economic expansion, while departing from his explanation for (...)
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  • Nationalism, individualism, and capitalism: Reply to Greenfeld.Warren Breckman & Lars Trägårdh - 1996 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 10 (3):389-407.
    Abstract Reversing the arguments of Anderson, Gellner, and Hobs?bawm, Liah Greenfeld contends that it is nationalism that produces economic development. Specifically, she claims that nationalism inspired three seminal economic thinkers: Marx, List, and Smith. However, Greenfeld's ideological preferences lead her to a problematic conception of individualism as nationalism, as well as to flawed treatments of Smith, List, and Marx. Nationalism is better understood as an attempt to address the deepening conflict between the imperative of community and the secular trends of (...)
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