Introduction: At the Heart of the Market, Mandy L. Cooper and
Andrew Popp, (University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA, and
Copenhagen Business School, Denmark)
Part I: Disciplinary Emotions
1. Accounting for the Middling Sorts: Emotions and the
Family-Business, c1750-1832, Katie Barclay (University of Adelaide,
Australia)
2. Emotional Strategies: Businesswomen in the Civil War Era United
States, Mandy L. Cooper, (University of North Carolina at
Greensboro, USA)
3. Selling Trust in the Antebellum Service Sector, Daniel Levinson
Wilk (SUNY-Fashion Institute of Technology, USA)
4. The Cold War and the Making of Advertising in Post-War Turkey,
Semih Gokatalay (University of California San Diego, USA)
Part II: Enabling Emotions
5. Marriage “à la mode du pays:” When Identity and Contractual Love
Became a Pledge for the Signares’ Business, Cheikh Sene (Université
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France)
6. ‘The commerce of affection’: Masculinity and Emotional Bonds
among Boston Merchants, Laura C. McCoy (Northwestern University,
USA)
7. From Scotland with Love: The Creation of the Japanese Whisky
Industry, 1918-1979, Alison J. Gibb and Niall G. MacKenzie (Adam
Smith Business School, University of Glasgow, UK)
8. Malone's on the Southside: Hearing a Telling of Their Story,
Andrew Popp (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark)
Part III: Unruly Emotions
9. The Worst Business in the World? The Emotional Historiography of
the Arms Industry, Catherine Fletcher (Manchester Metropolitan
University, UK)
10. Making Sense of Financal Crises in the Netherlands: The
Emtional Economy of Bubbles (1637-1987), Joost Dankers (Utrecht
University, The Netherlands), Ronald Kroeze (Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Inger Leemans (Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam, The Netherlands), and Floris van Berckel Smit (Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
11. Waiting for Fevers to Abate: Contagion and Fear in the Domestic
Slave Trade, Robert Colby (Christopher Newport University, USA)
13. Selling Out or Staying True? Fear, Anxiety, and Debates about
Feminist Entrepreneurship in the 1970s Women’s Movement, Debra
Michals (Merrimack College, USA)
Selected Bibliography
Index
This volume studies the history of emotions and business history in tandem to open a new avenue of research for both fields.
Mandy Cooper is Lecturer of History at the University of
North Carolina at Greensboro, USA. Her current project shows how
enduring practices, focused on emotional family ties, informed
conceptions of business and government among the nation’s political
leaders in the decades between the American Revolution and
Reconstruction.
Andrew Popp is Professor of History at Copenhagen Business
School, Denmark, and Editor-in-Chief of Enterprise and Society: The
International Journal of Business History. His book Entrepreneurial
Families: Business, Marriage and Life in the Early
Nineteenth-Century (2012) provided a sustained exploration of the
relationshipbetween business and familial emotions.
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