UID:
almafu_9959239538902883
Format:
1 online resource (xvii, 492 pages) :
,
digital, PDF file(s).
ISBN:
1-316-13828-3
,
1-316-13897-6
,
1-316-14187-X
,
1-316-14241-8
,
1-316-14128-4
,
0-521-52410-5
,
1-316-13959-X
,
1-316-14326-0
,
1-316-14071-7
,
1-107-05082-0
Content:
This book, first published in 2001, is a comprehensive history of the most powerful group in the nineteenth-century United States: New York City's economic elite. This small and diverse group of Americans accumulated unprecedented economic, social, and political power, and decisively put their mark on the age. Professor Beckert explores how capital-owning New Yorkers overcame their distinct antebellum identities to forge dense social networks, create powerful social institutions, and articulate an increasingly coherent view of the world and their place within it. Actively engaging in a rapidly changing economic, social, and political environment, these merchants, industrialists, bankers, and professionals metamorphosed into a social class. In the process, these upper-class New Yorkers put their stamp on the major political conflicts of the day - ranging from the Civil War to municipal elections. Employing the methods of social history, The Monied Metropolis explores the big issues of nineteenth-century social change.
Note:
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
,
Fortunes, Manners, Politics.
,
Accumulating Capital.
,
Navigating the New Metropolis.
,
The Politics of Capital --
,
Reluctant Revolutionaries.
,
Bourgeois New Yorkers Go to War.
,
The Spoils of Victory.
,
Reconstructing New York --
,
A Bourgeois World.
,
Democracy in the Age of Capital.
,
The Culture of Capital.
,
The Rights of Labor, The Rights of Property.
,
The Power of Capital and the Problem of Legitimacy.
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 1-322-17739-2
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-521-79039-5
Language:
English
URL:
Volltext
(lizenzpflichtig)
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781107050822
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