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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gareth DalePublisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.680kg ISBN: 9780231176088ISBN 10: 0231176082 Pages: 400 Publication Date: 31 May 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction 1. In the East-West Salon 2. Bearing the Cross of War 3. Triumph and Tragedy of Red Vienna 4. Challenges and Responses 5. The Cataclysm and Its Origins 6. Injustices and Inhumanities 7. The Precariousness of Existence Epilogue: A Lost World of Socialism Notes IndexReviewsThis much needed and accessibly crafted biography by a recognized authority on Karl Polanyi is well researched and supported by a range of sources, including archival material, interviews, and other contemporaneous scholars. The rich historical sourcing provides stimulating material for both scholarly audiences and general readers interested in the lives, contributions, and intellectual thought of fascinating individuals and scholars who lived through this particularly era. -- Sally Randles, Senior Research Fellow at the University of Manchester Institute of Innovation Research One of the best biographies ever written of any intellectual emerging from the horrors of mid-twentieth century Europe, it meticulously covers the whole ground - from the Jewish roots in Budapest through the First War, brilliantly reconstructs the milieu and debates of interwar Vienna, and adds enormously to our understanding of The Great Transformation. A compelling portrait, it is successful not just as an intellectual biography, but a personal one as well. -- John A. Hall, McGill University The intellectual biography of one of the truly great thinkers of the twentieth century, Karl Pol nyi, an heir to Rousseau - comparable in importance to Max Weber or to John Maynard Keynes - is a daunting entreprise. Particularly so, since Pol nyi's life is bound to the history of a European radicalism now defunct or dormant. Gareth Dale is equal to this task, the complexity of which is incredible. I have no doubt that this is a durable work which will be read by generations. Also, it will show that this half-submerged chapter in the chronicle of the revolutionary and - to say the same with another word - theoretical upheavals is indispensable for everybody who still insist on being able to think critically. -- G.M. Tam s This is a well-written, often sparkling, always informative, comprehensive narrative about the life and work of Karl Polanyi. The analysis is rich and cultural and historical contextualization, full of interesting allusions and reflections, wonderfully evocative of the unfolding events on a European and Transatlantic stage - it will be the standard reference point for all future work on Polanyi. -- Bob Jessop, Distinguished Professor of Sociology, University of Lancaster Here is the book the many admirers of Karl Polanyi have been waiting for: a vivid, thoroughly researched, and lucidly written intellectual biography that is worthy of its subject. It traces Polanyi's life and developing ideas first in central Europe, then in Britain and North America, showing both their rootedness in the 'lost world' of twentieth-century socialism and their ever-greater relevance to making sense of the market societies of our own time. -- Steven Lukes, author of Power: A Radical View One of the best biographies ever written of any intellectual emerging from the horrors of mid-twentieth-century Europe. It meticulously covers the whole ground-from the Jewish roots in Budapest through the First War, brilliantly reconstructs the milieu and debates of interwar Vienna, and adds enormously to our understanding of The Great Transformation. A compelling portrait, it is successful not just as an intellectual biography but as a personal one as well. -- John A. Hall, author of Ernest Gellner: An Intellectual Biography Writing the intellectual biography of one of the truly great thinkers of the twentieth century, an heir to Rousseau-comparable in importance to Max Weber or to John Maynard Keynes-is a daunting enterprise. Particularly so, since Polanyi's life is bound to the history of a European radicalism now defunct or dormant. Gareth Dale is equal to this task, the complexity of which is incredible. I have no doubt that this is a durable work that will be read by generations. Also, it will show that this half-submerged chapter in the chronicle of revolutionary and-to say the same with another word-theoretical upheavals is indispensable for everybody who still insists on being able to think critically. -- G. M. Tam s, author of Innocent Power: 100 Notes, 100 Thoughts This is a well-written, often sparkling, always informative, comprehensive narrative about the life and work of Karl Polanyi. The analysis is rich with cultural and historical contextualization, full of interesting allusions and reflections, and wonderfully evocative of the unfolding events on a European and transatlantic stage-it will be the standard reference point for all future work on Polanyi. -- Bob Jessop, University of Lancaster This much needed and accessibly crafted biography by a recognized authority on Karl Polanyi is well researched and supported by a range of sources, including archival material, interviews, and other contemporaneous scholars. The rich historical sourcing provides stimulating material for both scholarly audiences and general readers interested in the lives, contributions, and intellectual thought of fascinating individuals and scholars who lived through this particularly era. -- Sally Randles, Senior Research Fellow at the University of Manchester Institute of Innovation Research The long wait for an intellectual biography of Karl Polanyi is finally over. The task is intimidating because Polanyi's concepts are difficult to untangle and his life was divided into successive sojourns in five different countries with three different languages. But Gareth Dale has succeeded in writing an engaging and meticulously researched book that illuminates Polanyi's ideas and situates them in their proper historical context. -- Fred Block, author of The Power of Market Fundamentalism: Karl Polanyi's Critique This much needed and accessibly crafted biography by a recognized authority on Karl Polanyi is well researched and supported by a range of sources, including archival material, interviews, and other contemporaneous scholars. The rich historical sourcing provides stimulating material for both scholarly audiences and general readers interested in the lives, contributions, and intellectual thought of fascinating individuals and scholars who lived through this particularly era. -- Sally Randles, Senior Research Fellow at the University of Manchester Institute of Innovation Research Author InformationGareth Dale is senior lecturer in politics and international relations at Brunel University, London. His other books include Karl Polanyi: The Limits of the Market (2010), Karl Polanyi: The Hungarian Writings (2016), and Green Growth: Ideology, Political Economy, and the Alternatives (2016). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |