People 


Thorstein Veblen 1857–1929 -  United States


Encyclopedia Entries

Columbia Encyclopedia

Wikipedia


Questions of 

Detached from the dominant American society by his cultural background and temperament, Veblen was able to dissect social and economic institutions and to analyze their psychological bases, thus laying the foundations for the school of institutional economics. His dry, involved, satiric style enabled Veblen to coin famous phrases such as “conspicuous consumption.” In his criticism of the price system, his analysis of the business cycle, and his interpretation of the role of technical men in modern society, there are implications for social engineering. Veblen did not achieve popular acclaim in his time but has since exerted significant influence.

Reading

The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899)

The Theory of Business Enterprise (1904)

Imperial Germany and the Industrial Revolution (1915)

The Engineers and the Price System (1921)

Absentee Ownership and Business Enterprise in Recent Times (1923). 

He also translated The Laxdoela Saga (1925) from the Icelandic. 

Essays in Our Changing Order was published in 1934. 

Anthologies of his writings have been edited with introductions by W. C. Mitchell (1936) and Max Lerner (1948).


Writing Available on the Internet

Project Gutenberg edition of The Theory of the Leisure Class (http://www.gutenberg.net/etext97/totlc11.txt)


Commentary

See selected writings ed. by W. C. Mitchell (1936, repr. 1964) and M. Lerner (1950). See also biographies by J. Dorfman (1934, repr. 1966), J. A. Hobson (1936, repr. 1971), and D. F. Dowd (1964); studies by R. V. Teggart (1932, repr. 1966), S. Daugert (1950), D. F. Dowd, ed. (1958), and C. C. Qualey, ed. (1968).


Quotations