Introduction: Projecting and Capitalism: A Reappraisal
1: Contexts and Contours
2: Broken Promises and the Rise of a Stereotype
3: Reformation and Distrust
4: Turning a Project into Reality
5: Memories, Propriety and Emulation
6: Consuming Projects
Conclusion: Visible Hands Taming Capitalism
Bibliography
Koji Yamamoto is a historian of early modern England. He has spent twelve happy years in the UK, taking master's and doctoral degrees in York, and subsequently working at universities in London (King's College London), St Andrews, Edinburgh, and Cambridge. He was a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow between 2012 and 2014. From April 2016, he has been an Assistant Professor in Business History at the Faculty of Economics, the University of Tokyo.
Overall, Yamamoto's project to find a middle way between grand
syntheses and specialized case studies is a success. The book
combines substantial archival research, attention to detail, and
nuance with a capacity to highlight more general patterns in the
evolution of projecting. It reconstructs the wide assortment of
people and institutions involved in projecting, as well as the
troubled and uncertain political environment in which this activity
took place.
*Nadia Matringe, London School of Economics, Renaissance
Quarterly*
[M]edievalists will benefit by thinking with him both about method
and theory. He builds his case meticulously, systematically moving
between different genres of sources, different archives, different
actors, and different moments in time, all the while trying to
combine cultural history with institutional, economic, and
political history."
*Martha Howell, The Medieval Review*
Yamamoto's superb book ... offers a fascinating account of how the
productive capacities of economics initiatives were promoted and
its destructive tendencies contained. ... [It] deserves much
applause and a readership consisting not only of early modernists,
economic historians, cultural historians, and historians of
economic thought but also, and perhaps in particular, business
historians.
*Carl Wennerlind, Business History Review *
Koji Yamamoto's timely and important new book ... offers an
important lesson for our own times, that a fully unregulated
capitalist market will inevitably tend toward abuse and inequality,
promoting private gain over the public good. Only when the free
market is tamed can it function properly, and that process is both
active and visible.
*Eric H. Ash, Journal of Modern History*
Taming Capitalism is, as it sets out to be, a useful corrective to
whiggish narratives of English improvement. ... The book is
strongest in describing these changes, persuasively moving between
closely analysed case studies and a broader picture.
*Molly Corlett, Reviews in History *
immensely pleasing and impressive ... Yamamoto's book resembles the
bullseye of a huge diagram. Its larger intersecting circles include
the history of innovation and regulation; elite and popular
literary sources; and legal, political, and social history. In
smaller circles there is history of science, religious history, the
analysis of memory, sociologist Erving Goffman's work on stigma,
and more. The outcome of these intersections is ... a persuasively
coherent extension and revision of important prior work on economic
innovation by Joel Mokyr and Paul Slack ... This is a magisterial
book that should be read not only for its substantive claims but as
a methodological model for a deeply nuanced account of
seventeenth-century developments.
*David Zaret, Journal of British Studies*
[An] ambitious and yet meticulously researched book ... Yamamoto's
willingness to tackle head on the grandest of narratives about
early modern England signifies the extent of his ambitions.
However, this is not at the expense of close contextualised reading
of the early modern evidence, resulting in an impressive balance
between detailed case studies and striking generalisations. ...
Overall this is an impressive and indeed agenda setting work.
*Thomas Leng, Seventeenth Century*
Koji Yamamoto's much-awaited book addresses how the impact of
economic change upon society can be accommodated. It is a highly
challenging work in both senses of the word, taking aim at several
established lines of argument by bringing economic, social,
political, and cultural approaches together into a wider synthesis.
... it deserves to find a very wide readership.
*Aaron Graham, Economic History Review*
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