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Economics and Literature: A Novel Approach [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by (Faculté des sciences économiques (Université de Namur)), Edited by (Paris School of Economics), Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 342 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 790 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032877650
  • ISBN-13: 9781032877655
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 342 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 790 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032877650
  • ISBN-13: 9781032877655
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Economics and fiction often pursue parallel objectives. Economists analyze human decisions and interactions in markets and other institutions. Fiction writers also provide keen insights into individual minds and motives, examining how their characters respond to conflict and tensions in varied situations. This book explores the insights to be gained from developing this parallel.

In each chapter, economists discuss classic or contemporary literary creations, exploring economic incentives that motivate the characters, the economic mechanisms that tie them together, and/or the economic context in which they live and develop. Exploring the synergy across economics and literature offers new understandings of themes, including capitalism and colonialism, marriage and markets, gender norms, inheritance and estates, and the political economy of poverty. The broad and deep range of literary works includes writers from Shakespeare and Goethe, through Chekov and Steinbeck, to recent Nobelists Abdulrazak Gurnah and Han Kang. By offering new understandings of both economics and literature, readers will gain deeper insights into people’s thought processes, choices, and consequences.

This book will captivate readers in economics, social sciences, and the humanities and open their minds to the viewing of economic ideas and concepts through the prism of great works of literature.



Economics and fiction often pursue parallel objectives. Economists analyse human decisions and interactions in markets and other institutions. Fiction writers also provide keen insights into individual minds and motives. This book explores the insights to be gained from developing this parallel.

Recenzijos

I like happy endings -- so I was very pleased to learn about a literature student at a famous university who, being frustrated at not finding Steinbecks Grapes of Wrath in the literature section of the university library, could successfully locate it among books on agriculture. Boundaries between subjects can be overcome in different ways, including through confusion, but they can also be crossed deliberately in wise and enriching ways. This lovely book, with a fine collection of essays, has been led by an insightful and innovative plan of bringing together literature and economics. It is a splendid achievement. Rather than seeking a happy ending, we must wish for more works like this that bring together apparently distant disciplines.

- Amartya Sen, Lamont University Professor, Harvard University, and Nobel Laureate in Economics

Economists aim to understand human behavior and human interactions with the world. Novelists aim to illustrate how human interactions affect individuals emotions and behavior. In so doing both fields teach us about the world. Economics and Literature: A Novel Approach is a compilation of brilliant essays from a globally representative selection of economists who are also perceptive readers of fine literature. It entertains while illuminating the commonalities of economics and literature.

- Alison Booth, Emeritus Professor, Australian National University and author of novels including Bellevue, A Perfect Marriage, and A Distant Land

Growing up on a university campus, with a love of reading and an economist father, I never thought there was a contradiction between literature and economics. Later, as a university student myself, I would discover that the two disciplines were placed in mutually separated silos no economics was discussed in my literature classes, and no literature in my economics ones. This adventurous book seeks to remedy that deficiency, and to remind us that at the heart of intellectual fertility and creativity lies cross-pollination.

- Mohsin Hamid (novelist, writer, winner of the LA Times Book Prize, author of Moth Smoke, and The Reluctant Fundamentalist)

A good novel often teaches us more about the world than looking at facts and figures. And the same goes for economic theory which offers us a means of interpreting the world works that informs the way that we look at social and economic phenomena. This daring and entertaining collection of essays generates new insights, demonstrating that literature and economics have a lot in common.

- Tim Besley (School Professor of Economics and Political Science and W. Arthur Lewis Professor of Development Economics in the Department of Economics at LSE)

Economics and Literature: A Novel Approach will be a delight to anyone who is curious about the human condition. It is a great read for those who believe that economists way of thinking describes all human motivation; many good examples support your point of view. But it will also be a great read for those who believe that economic thinking misses the boat: such as misunderstanding the importance of true love. But, speaking of boats, this book with its selection of novels from many continents is a lot more fun than a round-the-world cruise. Its descriptions and critiques of those selected novels describe people in depth everywhere. And, if you do take that cruise, also do me, and yourself, a big favor. Please pack A Novel Approach in your baggage. Much better than any tour guide, it will explain what all those people around the world are really thinking; and why.

- George Akerlof (Daniel E. Koshland, Sr. Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of California Berkeley; Nobel Laureate in Economics 2001)

Editors Introduction Part I: Development and structural transformation
of society and economy 1 A Bengali Novel on Economic Transition in History 2
Tradition and Modernity in Subsaharan Africa: Insights from Achebes Things
Fall Apart 3 The Art of Conquering Without Being Right: Agency, Education,
and Learning by Doing in Cheikh Hamidou Kanes Ambiguous Adventure. 4 On
Capitalism and Colonialism: The Economic Imperatives Underlying Amitav
Ghoshs Sea of Poppies 5 The Lone Scream in the Dark: Cultural Change and
Institutional Transformation in Modern China as seen through Lu Xuns Novel 6
Zola's Ladies Paradise and Creative Destruction 7 Women in a nervous
breakdown: Intra household bargaining and gender norms in South Korea Part
II: Market operation and dysfunction8 Only the Housing Problem Has Corrupted
Them 9 Can Machines Replace Us? 10 Abdulrazak Gurnah and Contract-Enforcement
Institutions in His Novel By the Sea 11 Marriage and Markets: Lessons from
Pride and Prejudice Part III: Limits of the Homo Economicus model 12 The
Esterhįzy Myth: How Economics and Literature Correct Mistakes 13 The
Nostalgia for Missed Opportunities 14 The Financial Expert of Malgudi 15
Estates, Inheritance and Gifts: Looking a Gift Horse in the Mouth 16 The
Inheritance Mess: Pčre Goriot and King Lear Offer Us a Mirror 17 The Master,
the Helicopter, and Margarita 18 Money in the Faustian pact Part IV:
Rent-seeking, corruption and bad political governance 19 How Steinbeck Speaks
to Institutions in Economics 20 The Economics of Innocence: Imbolo Mbues
How Beautiful We Were 21 Frank Herberts Dune
Franēois Bourguignon is Professor Emeritus at the Paris School of Economics.

Avinash Dixit is Emeritus Professor of Economics at Princeton University.

Luc Leruth is Research Associate at the University of Clermont Auvergne.

Jean-Philippe Platteau is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Namur.