Metaphors in the History of Economic Thought: Crises, Business Cycles and Equilibrium explores the evolution of economic theorizing through the lens of metaphors. The edited volume sheds light on metaphors which have been used by a range of key thinkers and schools of thought to describe economic crises, business cycles and economic equilibrium.
Structured in three parts, the book examines an array of metaphors ranging from mechanics, waves, storms, medicine and beyond. The international panel of contributors focuses primarily on economic literature up to the Second World War, knowing again that the use of metaphors in economic work has seen a resurgence since the 1980s.
This work will be of interest to advanced students and researchers in the history of economic thought, and economics and language.
Author(s): Roberto Baranzini, Daniele Besomi
Series: Routledge Studies in the History of Economics
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 298
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Introduction
PART I: Crises
1 Economic crises in 19th-century Italy: a cultural analysis
2 Clément Juglar’s epistemic use of metaphors
3 Riders on the storm: W. Stanley Jevons, meteorology and the analysis of ‘Commercial Fluctuations’
PART II: Business cycles
4 Stitching things together. Marshall on the economy as an ‘organic whole’
5 Differentiation, integration, and the great variety of organisms: biological origins of Werner Sombart’s business cycle theory
6 Biological, medical and physical metaphors in Germán Bernácer’s theory of business cycles (1916–1936)
7 The nature of monetary disturbances in Austrian and Swedish business cycle theories
8 How economics failed to understand crises. Constitutive metaphors in business cycle analysis, from Frisch to Real Business Cycles
PART III: Equilibrium
9 The pendulum and equilibrium: a survey
10 Statistical equilibrium in early 20th-century Italian economics
Name Index