Who Cooked Adam Smith's Dinner?
«Polemical and entertaining»
Observer
Adam Smith, the founder of modern economics, believed that our actions stem from self-interest and the world turns because of financial gain. But every night Adam Smith's mother served him his dinner, not out of self-interest but out of love. Les mer
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Granta Books
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 240
- ISBN
- 9781846275661
- Utgivelsesår
- 2016
- Format
- 20 x 13 cm
- Priser
- Short-listed for Bread and Roses Award 2016 UK.
Anmeldelser
«Polemical and entertaining»
Observer
«Smart, funny and readable»
Margaret Atwood
«A welcome addition to a canon dominated by men. With feminist incisiveness [Marçal] looks at the mess we're in. Witty and perceptive»
Vanessa Baird, New Internationalist
«Economics through a wholly different prism - challenging and illuminating»
Will Hutton, author, Them and Us
«Incisive and witty, Who Cooked Adam Smith's Dinner? seeks to restore a sense of humanity, empathy and care to our picture of economic and gender relations. Katrine Marçal's book is instructive, angry and funny: economic man has met his match»
Nina Power, author, One Dimensional Woman
«[A] wise critique of current economics»
Lesley McDowell, Sunday Herald
«Who cooked Adam Smith's dinner? His mother, of course. From this compelling insight, Katrine Marçal builds her critique of economic man, exposing him for the sham he really is. Erudite, furious, and eminently readable, this book will send a great many economists running for cover»
Philip Roscoe, author, I Spend Therefore I Am
«Required reading for everyone on the left... buy it as a pledge to change the world»
Caroline Criado-Perez, author, Do It Like A Woman
«[A] spirited and witty manifesto... In commanding rhetoric punctuated with spiky wit... Marçal does not seek to yoke every last aspect of our lives to the tyranny of Homo economicus. Rather, she asks why we have fetishised the myth, and suggests that man denuded of his humanity is not such a figure to aspire to after all»
Caroline Criado-Perez, New Statesman
«Thought provoking»
Jessica Abrahams, Prospect
«The book skewers "economic man" [...] with admirable wit and lightness of touch»
Nick Spencer, Tablet