An Economy of Strangers
Jews and Finance in England, 1650-1830 (Jewish Culture and Contexts)
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Simon Barber
このコンテンツについて
One of the most persistent, powerful, and dangerous notions in the history of the Jews in the diaspora is the prodigious talent attributed to them in all things economic.
In An Economy of Strangers, Avinoam Yuval-Naeh historicizes the association of Jews with the economy by focusing on one specific time and place - the financial revolution that England underwent from the late seventeenth century that coincided with the reestablishment of the Jewish population there for the first time in almost four hundred years. European Christian societies had to that point shunned finance and constructed a normative system to avoid it, relying on the figure of the Jew as a foil. But as the economy modernized in the seventeenth century, finance became the hinge of national power. Finance’s rise in England provoked intense national debates. Could financial economy, based on lending money on interest, be accommodated within Christian state and society when it had previously been understood as a Jewish practice?
By projecting the modern economy and the Jewish community onto each other, the Christian majority imbued them with interrelated meanings. This braiding together of parallel developments, Yuval-Naeh argues, reveals in a meaningful way how the contemporary and wide-ranging association of Jews with the modern economy could be created.
The book is published by University of Pennsylvania Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.
©2024 University of Pennsylvania (P)2025 Redwood Audiobooks批評家のレビュー
"With erudition, clarity, and insight, An Economy of Strangers reveals how contemporaries used Jews... to evaluate the emergence of new commercial realities." (David Feldman, University of London)
"Thoroughly researched and compellingly written book..." (Dana Rabin, author of Britain and Its Internal Others, 1750–1800