Authors: David Graeber
_____. 1964. “Between Slavery and Freedom”
Comparative Studies in Society and History
6 (3): 233-249.
_____. 1974.
The Ancient Economy
. Berkeley: University of California Press.
_____. 1980.
Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology
. London: Penguin
_____. 1981.
Economy and Society in Ancient Greece
. New York: Penguin.
_____. 1983.
Politics in the Ancient World
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
_____. 1985.
Studies in land and credit in ancient Athens
, 500-200
B.C.: the horos inscriptions
. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.
Firth, Raymond. 1959.
Economics of the New Zealand Maori
. Wellington, New Zealand: R. E. Owen.
Fischel, Walter J. 1937.
Jews in the Economic and Political Life of Medieval Islam
. London: Royal Asiatic Society.
Fiser, Ivo. 2004. “The Problem of the Setthi in Buddhist Jatakas.” In
Trade in Early India
(Ranabir Chakravarti, editor), pp. 166-198. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Fisher, Douglas. 1989. “The Price Revolution: A Monetary Interpretation.”
Journal of Economic History
49 (1):884-902.
Fitzpatrick, Jim. 2001.
Three Brass Balls: the Story of the Irish Pawnshop
. Dublin: Collins Press.
Flandrin, Jean-Louis. 1979.
Families in Former Times
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Fleet, John Faithful. 1888.
Inscriptions of the Early Gupta Kings and Their Successors, Corpus Inscriptionium Indicarum, vol. III
. Calcutta: Government Printer.
Flynn, Dennis. 1978. “A New Perspective on the Spanish Price Revolution: The Monetary Approach to the Balance of Payments.”
Explorations in Economic History
15:388-406.
_____. 1979. “Spanish-American Silver and World Markets in the Sixteenth Century.”
Economic Forum
10: 46-71.
_____. 1982. “The Population Thesis View of Sixteenth-Century Inflation Versus Economics and History.” In
Munzpragung, Geldumlauf und Wechselkurse/Mintage, Monetary Circulation and Exchange Rates. Akten der C
7
-Section des
8
th International Economic History Congress Budapest
1982. (F. Irsigler and E. H.G. Van Cauwenberghe, editors.), pp. 361-382. Trier: THF-Verlag.
Flynn, Dennis and Arturo Giráldez. 1995. “Born with a ‘Silver Spoon’: the Origin of World Trade in 1571.”
Journal of World History
VI (2): 201-11.
_____. 2002. “Cycles of Silver: Global Economic Unity through the Mid-Eighteenth Century.”
Journal of World History
, vol.13, no 2, pp.391-427.
Forstater, Mathew. 2005. ‘Taxation and Primitive Accumulation: The Case of Colonial Africa,’
Research in Political Economy
, 22, 51-64.
_____. 2006. ‘Taxation: Additional Evidence from the History of Thought, Economic History, and Economic Policy,’ in M. Setterfield (ed.),
Complexity, Endogenous Money, and Exogenous Interest Rates
, Chetlenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
Frankfort, Henri. 1948.
Kingship and the Gods: A Study of Ancient Near Eastern Religion as the Integration of Society and Nature
. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Freuchen, Peter. 1961.
Book of the Eskimo
. Cleveland, Ohio: World Publishing Co.
Friedman, Thomas L. 1999.
The Lexus and the Olive Tree
. New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux.
Gadamer, Hans-Georg. 2004.
Truth and Method
(Joel Weinsheimer; Donald G Marshall, translators). London: Continuum.
Gale, Esson McDowell. 1967.
Discourse on Salt and Iron: a debate on state control of commerce and industry in ancient China
(by Huan K’uan). Taipei: Ch’eng-Wen.
Galey, Jean-Claude. 1983. “Creditors, Kings and Death: determinations and implications of bondage in Tehri-Gathwal (Indian Himalayas).” In
Debts and Debtors
(Charles Malamoud, editor), pp. 67-124. London: Vikas.
Gallant, Thomas W. 2000. “Honor, Masculinity, and Ritual Knife Fighting in Nineteenth-Century Greece.”
American Historical Review
105 (2): 359-82.
Gardiner, Geoffrey. 2004. “The Primacy of Trade Debts in the Development of Money.” In
Credit and State Theories of Money: The Contributions of A. Mitchell Innes
(L. Randall Wray, editor). Cheltingham, Edward Elgar.
Garnsey, Peter. 1996.
Ideas of Slavery from Aristotle to Augustine
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
_____. 2008.
Thinking about Property: From Antiquity to the Age of Revolution
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gates, Hill. 1989. “The Commoditization of Women in China.”
Signs
14 (4): 799-832.
Geertz, Clifford. 1973. “Deep play: notes on the Balinese cockfight.” In
The Interpretation of Culture
. New York: Basic Books.
Geertz, Hildred, and Clifford Geertz. 1975.
Kinship in Bali
. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Gernet, Jacques. 1956.
Les aspects economiques du bouddhisme dans la societe chinoise du Ve au Xe siècle
. Paris: Ecole francaise d’Extreme-Orient. English version:
Centuries
(Franciscus Verellen, translator). New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.
_____. 1960. “Les suicides par le feu chez les bouddhiques chinoises de Ve au Xe siecle,”
Melange publies par l’Institut des Hautes Études
II: 527-558.
_____. 1982.
A History of Chinese Civilization
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gerriets, Marilyn. 1978.
Money and Clientship in the Ancient Irish Laws
. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Toronto.
_____. 1981. “The Organization of Exchange in Early Christian Ireland.”
Journal of Economic History
41 (1): 171-176.
_____. 1985. “Money in Early Christian Ireland according to the Irish Laws.”
Comparative Studies in Society and History
27 (2): 323-339.
_____. 1987. “Kinship and Exchange in Pre-Viking Ireland.”
Cambridge Medieval Celtic Studies
13: 39-72.
Getz, Trevor R. 2003. “Mechanisms of Slave Acquisition and Exchange in Late Eighteenth Century Anomabu: Reconsidering a Cross-Section of the Atlantic Slave Trade.”
African Economic History
31: 75-89
Ghazanfar, Shaikh M.,. 1991. “Scholastic Economics and Arab Scholars: The ‘Great Gap’ Thesis Reconsidered.”
Diogenes: International Review of Humane Sciences;
No.154: 117-33.
_____. 2000. “The Economic Thought of Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali and St. Thomas Aquinas: Some Comparative Parallels and Links.”
History of Political Economy
, 32 (4): 857-888.
_____. 2003.
“Medieval Islamic economic thought: filling the “great gap” in European economics
. New York: Routledge.
Ghazanfar, Shaikh M., and Abdul Azim Islahi,. 1997.
The Economic Thought of al-Ghazali
(450-505
A.H.
/ 1058-1111
A.D.)
Jeddah: Scientific Publishing Centre King Abdulaziz University.
_____. 2003. “Explorations in Medieval Arab-Islamic Thought: Some Aspects of Ibn Taimiyah’s Economics.” In
Medieval Islamic economic thought: filling the “great gap” in European economics
(S. Ghazanfar, editor), pp. 53-71. New York: Routledge.
Gibson, Charles. 1964.
The Aztecs under Spanish rule: a history of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico
, 1519-1810. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Gilder, George. 1981.
Wealth and Poverty
. New York: Basic Books.
_____. 1990.
Microcosm: the quantum revolution in economics and technology
. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Glahn, Richard Von. 1996a.
Fountain of Fortune: Money and Monetary Policy in China
, 1000-1700. Berkeley: University of California Press.
_____. 1996b. “Myth and Reality of China’s Seventeenth Century Monetary Crisis.”
Journal of Economic History
56, no 2, pp. 429-54.
Glancey, Jennifer A. 2006.
Slavery in Early Christianity
. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gluckman, Max. 1971.
Politics, Law and Ritual in Tribal Society
. London: Basil Blackwell.
Goldstone, Jack A. 1984. “Urbanization and Inflation: Lessons from the English Price Revolution of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.”
American Journal of Sociology
89 (5): 1122-60.
_____. 1991. “Monetary Versus Velocity Interpretations of the ‘Price Revolution’: A Comment.”
Journal of Economic History
51 (1): 176-181
_____. 2002. “Efflorescences and Economic Growth in World History: Rethinking the ‘Rise of the West’ and the Industrial Revolution.”
Journal of World History
13 (2): 323-89.
Goodman, Martin. 1983.
State and Society in Roman Galilee, A.D
. 132-212. London: Valentine Mitchell.
Goody, Jack. 1976.
Production and reproduction: a comparative study of the domestic domain
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
_____. 1983.
Development of Marriage and the Family in Europe
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
_____. 1990.
The Oriental, the Ancient, and the Primitive: Systems of Marriage and the Family in the pre-Industrial Societies of Eurasia
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
_____. 1996.
The East in the West
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Goody, Jack and Stanley J. Tambiah. 1973.
Bridewealth and Dowry
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Goitein, Shelomo Dov. 1954. “From the Mediterranean to India: Documents on the Trade to India, South Arabia, and East Africa from the Eleventh to Twelfth Centuries.”
Speculum
29: 181-97.
_____. 1957. “The Rise and Fall of the Middle Eastern bourgeoisie in early Islamic times.”
Journal of World History
3: 583-603.
_____. 1964. “The commercial mail service in medieval Islam.”
Journal of the American Oriental Society
84: 118-23.
_____. 1966. “Banker’s Accounts from the Eleventh Century A.D.”
Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient
9: 28-66.
_____. 1967.
A Mediterranean Society, The Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza
. Berkeley: University of California. Press.
_____. 1973.
Letters of Medieval Jewish Traders
. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Gordon, Barry. 1982. “Lending at interest: some Jewish, Greek, and Christian approaches, 800 BC-AD 100.”
History of Political Economy
14 (3):406-426.
_____. 1989.
The economic problem in biblical and patristic thought
. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
Gough, Kathleen. 1971. “Nuer Kinship: a Reexamination.” In
The Translation of Culture: Essays to E. E. Evans-Pritchard
(T. Beidelman, editor), pp. 79-123. London: Tavistock Publications.
Goux, Jean-Joseph. 1990.
Symbolic Economies: After Marx and Freud
(Jennifer Curtiss Gage, translator.) Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Graeber, David. 1997. “Manners, Deference and Private Property: the Generalization of Avoidance in Early Modern Europe.”
Comparative Studies in Society and History
39 (4): 694-728.
_____. 2001.
Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value: The False Coin of Our Own Dreams
. New York: Palgrave.
_____. 2005. “Fetishism and Social Creativity, or Fetishes are Gods in Process of Construction.”
Anthropological Theory
5 (4): 407-438.
_____. 2006. “Turning Modes of Production Inside Out: Or, Why Capitalism is a Transformation of Slavery (short version).”
Critique of Anthropology
26 (1): 61-81.
_____. 2007.
Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion and Desire
. Oakland: AK Press.
_____. 2009. “Debt, Violence, and Impersonal Markets: Polanyian Meditations.” In
Market and Society: The Great Transformation today
(Chris Hann and Keith Hart, editors), pp. 106-132. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Graham, Angus Charles. 1960.
The Book of Lieh-Tzu
. London: John Murray.
_____. 1979. “The Nung-Chia ‘School of the Tillers’ and the Origin of Peasant Utopianism in China.”
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
, Vol. 42 no.1, pp. 66-100.
_____. 1989.
Disputers of the Tao: Philosophical Argument in Ancient China
. La Salle, Illinois: Open Court Press.
_____. 1994. Studies in Chinese philosophy and philosophical literature.
SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture. Albany: SUNY
.
Grahl, John. 2000. “Money as Sovereignty: the Economics of Michel Aglietta.”
New Political Economy
5 (2): 291-316.
Grandell, Axel. 1977. “The reckoning board and tally stick.”
Accounting Historians Journal
4 (1): 101-105.
Gray, Robert F. 1968. “Sonjo Bride-Price and the Question of African ‘Wife Purchase.’ ”
American Anthropologist
62: 34-47.
Greengus. Samuel. 1966. “Old Babylonian Marriage Ceremonies and Rites.”
Journal of Cuneiform Studies
20: 57-72.
_____. 1969. “The Old Babylonian marriage contract.”
Journal
of
the American Oriental Society
89: 505-532.
_____. 1975. “Sisterhood Adoption at Nuzi and the ‘Wife-Sister’ in Genesis.”
Hebrew Union College Annual
46: 5-31.
_____. 1990. “Bridewealth in Sumerian sources.”
Hebrew Union College Annual
61: 25-88.
Gregory, Christopher A. 1982.
Gifts and Commodities
. New York: Academic Press.
_____. 1998.
Savage Money: The Anthropology and Politics of Commodity Exchange
. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers.
Green, Peter. 1993.
Alexander to Actium: the historical evolution of the Hellenistic age
. Berkeley: University of California Press.