The Corporation in the Nineteenth-Century American Imagination

The Corporation in the Nineteenth-Century American Imagination - Edinburgh Critical Studies in Law, Literature and the Humanities

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Publisher's Synopsis

Examines the way the corporation - a legal concept of enduring and timely importance in the Anglo-American legal tradition - was imagined in the nineteenth-century historical imagination.

Stefanie Mueller traces the ways in which literary and cultural representations of the corporation in nineteenth-century America helped shift how the corporation was envisioned; from a public tool meant to serve the common good, to an instrument of private enterprise. She explores how artists and writers together with lawyers and economists represented this transformation through narrative and metaphor. Drawing on a range of legal, literary and visual texts, she shows how the corporation's public origins as well as its fundamentally collective nature continued to be relevant much longer than previous scholarship has argued.

Book information

ISBN: 9781399505000
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Imprint: Edinburgh University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 820.93553
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 224
Weight: 486g
Height: 241mm
Width: 162mm
Spine width: 19mm