Ideology and the Rise of Labor Theory in America.
By (Author) John A. De Brizzi
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
29th March 1983
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Trade unions
306.360973
Hardback
196
DeBrizzi argues that the immense influence of [the John Commons-Wisconsin school theory, a live and let live' attitude, rather than class struggle] is better explained by its fit with the ideology of the reform-oriented entrepreneurs so admired by Commons than by its fit with the facts. DeBrizzi examines the earlier theories of Richard Ely and Henry Carter Adams (also reform-oriented antisocialist), the historical phenomena these theories were trying to explain, and the process of institutionalization that established the Commons-Wisconsin theory as hegemonic. ... The presentation is lively and the argument intriguing. Recommended for all public, college, and university libraries.-Choice
"DeBrizzi argues that the immense influence of the John Commons-Wisconsin school theory, a live and let live' attitude, rather than class struggle is better explained by its fit with the ideology of the reform-oriented entrepreneurs so admired by Commons than by its fit with the facts. DeBrizzi examines the earlier theories of Richard Ely and Henry Carter Adams (also reform-oriented antisocialist), the historical phenomena these theories were trying to explain, and the process of institutionalization that established the Commons-Wisconsin theory as hegemonic. ... The presentation is lively and the argument intriguing. Recommended for all public, college, and university libraries."-Choice
"DeBrizzi argues that the immense influence of [the John Commons-Wisconsin school theory, a live and let live' attitude, rather than class struggle] is better explained by its fit with the ideology of the reform-oriented entrepreneurs so admired by Commons than by its fit with the facts. DeBrizzi examines the earlier theories of Richard Ely and Henry Carter Adams (also reform-oriented antisocialist), the historical phenomena these theories were trying to explain, and the process of institutionalization that established the Commons-Wisconsin theory as hegemonic. ... The presentation is lively and the argument intriguing. Recommended for all public, college, and university libraries."-Choice
Brizzi /f John /i A.