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- catalog contributor b4122742.
- catalog created "1993.".
- catalog date "1993".
- catalog date "1993.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1993.".
- catalog description "4.2. Contracts and Contracting Agents. 4.2.1. Choice. 4.2.2. Persons and Contracts. 4.3. The New Body Politic. 4.3.1. The Impersonality of the Contractarian Community. 5. The New Body Economic: The Contract Community and Its Economy. 5.1. The Economies of Despotic and Liberal Households. 5.2. Spades and Scepters. 5.3. The Autonomy of the Economic Sphere. 5.4. Labor. 5.4.1. The Alienation of Labor. 5.5. Time, Leisure, and the Liberal Economy. 6. Public Homes, Private Homes: Society and Economy in Classical Liberalism -- pt. 3. Marx and the New Household Economy. 7. The Dissolution of the Old World. 7.1. From Status to Contract. 7.2. Communities. 7.2.1. The "Real Community" of Use-Value. 7.2.2. The Bourgeois Community. 8. Markets. 8.1. Coercive Transfers: The Origins of the Market. 8.2. Choice and Constraints. 8.2.1. Remarks on Classes and the State. 8.3. Perverse Consequences. 8.3.1. Overproduction and Undersatisfaction. 8.3.2. Economies of Time. 8.4. Markets and Firms. 9. The Household Economy Restored.".
- catalog description "9.1. The Aristotelian Foundations of Marx's Economics. 9.2. The New Oikos. 9.2.1. Time. 9.2.2. Community. 9.2.3. Freedom. 10. Marx, Markets, and Household Economies -- Conclusion: "This Household Is What Is Common to Us."".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- catalog description "pt. 1. The Oikos: Beauty, Domination, Scarcity. 1. Odysseus' Household. 1.1. The Kurios. 1.2. Philia. 1.3. The Livelihood of Odysseus' Household. 1.3.1. Labor. 1.3.2. The Purposes of the Oikos Economy. 1.3.3. The Place of the Economy within the Household. 2. The Political Economy of the Ancient Household. 2.1. The Community of the Household. 2.2. Philia and Hierarchy in the Household. 2.3. The Household's Purposes. 2.3.1. The Ancient Economy of Time. 2.3.2. The Limits of Acquisition. 2.4. The Polis Economy. 2.5. Servitude. 2.5.1. Servitude, Community, and the Economy. 2.5.2. Servitude and Time. 2.5.3. "If Thus Shuttles Wove": Scarcity and Domination. 2.6. Pandora's Jar: The Idea of the Economy -- pt. 2. The Moral Economy of the Liberal Household. 3. Despotic and Conjugal Households. 3.1. Wives and Children. 3.2. Masters and Servants. 3.3. Hobbes and Rousseau on the Family. 4. Lions and Pole-Cats: Domination as the Summum Malum. 4.1. A Scepter to Rule.".
- catalog extent "xii, 305 ;".
- catalog identifier "0801427916 (cloth)".
- catalog identifier "080148068X (paper)".
- catalog issued "1993".
- catalog issued "1993.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Ithaca : Cornell University Press,".
- catalog subject "339.2/2 20".
- catalog subject "Economics Philosophy.".
- catalog subject "HB72 .B66 1993".
- catalog subject "Households Economic aspects.".
- catalog subject "Households Moral and ethical aspects.".
- catalog subject "Marxian economics.".
- catalog tableOfContents "4.2. Contracts and Contracting Agents. 4.2.1. Choice. 4.2.2. Persons and Contracts. 4.3. The New Body Politic. 4.3.1. The Impersonality of the Contractarian Community. 5. The New Body Economic: The Contract Community and Its Economy. 5.1. The Economies of Despotic and Liberal Households. 5.2. Spades and Scepters. 5.3. The Autonomy of the Economic Sphere. 5.4. Labor. 5.4.1. The Alienation of Labor. 5.5. Time, Leisure, and the Liberal Economy. 6. Public Homes, Private Homes: Society and Economy in Classical Liberalism -- pt. 3. Marx and the New Household Economy. 7. The Dissolution of the Old World. 7.1. From Status to Contract. 7.2. Communities. 7.2.1. The "Real Community" of Use-Value. 7.2.2. The Bourgeois Community. 8. Markets. 8.1. Coercive Transfers: The Origins of the Market. 8.2. Choice and Constraints. 8.2.1. Remarks on Classes and the State. 8.3. Perverse Consequences. 8.3.1. Overproduction and Undersatisfaction. 8.3.2. Economies of Time. 8.4. Markets and Firms. 9. The Household Economy Restored.".
- catalog tableOfContents "9.1. The Aristotelian Foundations of Marx's Economics. 9.2. The New Oikos. 9.2.1. Time. 9.2.2. Community. 9.2.3. Freedom. 10. Marx, Markets, and Household Economies -- Conclusion: "This Household Is What Is Common to Us."".
- catalog tableOfContents "pt. 1. The Oikos: Beauty, Domination, Scarcity. 1. Odysseus' Household. 1.1. The Kurios. 1.2. Philia. 1.3. The Livelihood of Odysseus' Household. 1.3.1. Labor. 1.3.2. The Purposes of the Oikos Economy. 1.3.3. The Place of the Economy within the Household. 2. The Political Economy of the Ancient Household. 2.1. The Community of the Household. 2.2. Philia and Hierarchy in the Household. 2.3. The Household's Purposes. 2.3.1. The Ancient Economy of Time. 2.3.2. The Limits of Acquisition. 2.4. The Polis Economy. 2.5. Servitude. 2.5.1. Servitude, Community, and the Economy. 2.5.2. Servitude and Time. 2.5.3. "If Thus Shuttles Wove": Scarcity and Domination. 2.6. Pandora's Jar: The Idea of the Economy -- pt. 2. The Moral Economy of the Liberal Household. 3. Despotic and Conjugal Households. 3.1. Wives and Children. 3.2. Masters and Servants. 3.3. Hobbes and Rousseau on the Family. 4. Lions and Pole-Cats: Domination as the Summum Malum. 4.1. A Scepter to Rule.".
- catalog title "Households : on the moral architecture of the economy / William James Booth.".
- catalog type "text".