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Morality and the Market in Victorian Britain by G. R. Searle, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
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Morality and the Market in Victorian Britain by G. R. Searle, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
From G. R. Searle
Current price: $427.50

From G. R. Searle
Morality and the Market in Victorian Britain by G. R. Searle, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Current price: $427.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: 2.3 x 23.4 x 600
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
In this lively and interesting study, G. R. Searle tackles the conundrum at the heart of Victorian life: how could capitalist values be harmonized with Christian beliefs and with concepts of public morality and social duty? Middle-class Victorians who broadly welcomed industrial growth andembraced the doctrines of `political economy' were sensitive to the charge that theirs was a selfish and materialistic creed. Consequently, if public morality was to be reconciled with the market, wage-labour had to be distinguished from slavery, investment from speculation, and entrepreneurialacumen from dishonesty and fraud. These ideas about citizenship and public virtue offered a greater challenge to rampant capitalism than any pressing need to alleviate poverty. Through its exploration of `Victorian values', this book provides lessons for all those engaged in the present-day debateabout the moral and social consequences of unleashing free market forces. | Morality and the Market in Victorian Britain by G. R. Searle, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
In this lively and interesting study, G. R. Searle tackles the conundrum at the heart of Victorian life: how could capitalist values be harmonized with Christian beliefs and with concepts of public morality and social duty? Middle-class Victorians who broadly welcomed industrial growth andembraced the doctrines of `political economy' were sensitive to the charge that theirs was a selfish and materialistic creed. Consequently, if public morality was to be reconciled with the market, wage-labour had to be distinguished from slavery, investment from speculation, and entrepreneurialacumen from dishonesty and fraud. These ideas about citizenship and public virtue offered a greater challenge to rampant capitalism than any pressing need to alleviate poverty. Through its exploration of `Victorian values', this book provides lessons for all those engaged in the present-day debateabout the moral and social consequences of unleashing free market forces. | Morality and the Market in Victorian Britain by G. R. Searle, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters


















