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cloth 1592136184 $89.50, Nov 08, Available
paper 1592136192 $29.95, Nov 08, Available
Electronic Book 1592136206 $89.50 Available
288 pp
6x9
15 tables 1 map(s) 3 figures
"Emigh has written a very important book that will have a big impact on historical sociology. Based on first-rate research and innovative methods of analysis, she offers an incisive review of previous theories of the transition to capitalism, and shows how the dynamism and efficiencies of urban markets serve to undermine rural markets."
Richard Lachmann, Department of Sociology, State University of New York at Albany
In The Undevelopment of Capitalism, Rebecca Jean Emigh argues that the expansion of the Florentine economic market in the fifteenth century helped to undo the development of markets in rural Tuscany, leading to the overall contraction of the urban and rural economy. As this highly developed urban market penetrated rural regions, it actually erased rural market institutions that rural inhabitants had used to organize agricultural production and family life. Thus, an advanced economy at the time of the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance "undeveloped" over time. The economic development of this region in Italy was delayed as it failed to keep pace with the rest of Europe.
Using a negative case methodology to show how urban and rural markets
change, Emigh employs methods of historical sociology and sectoral theories
to examine how markets can prosper and suffer at the same time. She shows
how sectoral relations are crucial to transitions to capitalism and how
capitalist development can also contract markets.
Excerpt available at www.temple.edu/tempress
List of Tables and Figures
Acknowledgements
Methodological Notes
1. Capitalism and Tuscany: Investigating the Past
2. Tuscany as a Negative Case of Transition to Capitalism
3. Linking Sectors and Markets
4. Smallholding: The Circulation of Property
5. Urban Involvement in Agriculture
6. Sharecropping: The Consolidation of Property
7. Comparing Productivity, Income, and Indebtedness
8. Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
![]() | Rebecca Jean Emigh is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Los Angeles. |
Sociology
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