Speculative Endeavors
Speculative Endeavors
Cultures of Knowledge and Capital in the Long Nineteenth Century
Foltinek, Selina; Horn, Katrin; Hoepker, Karin
Manchester University Press
04/2025
264
Dura
Inglês
9781526182159
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Introduction: Managing Knowledge and Capital in the Nineteenth Century - Karin Hoepker and Katrin Horn
Part I: Capital, Reputation, and Legal Recognition
1. Sometimes it IS worse to be talked about: Epistemic Surplus and Social Capital - Karen Adkins
2. Rumor as Speculative Practice: Reports of Slave Uprisings in the Nineteenth-Century US South - Sebastion Jobs
3. US Immigrants, Remittances, and the Courts, 1904-25 - Atiba Pertilla
Part II: Commerce, Print Culture, and the Circulation of Knowledge4. Epistemic Style and the "Knowing Unknown" of Racial Capitalism in W.E.B. Du Bois's "Scorn" - Alexander Starre
5. Black Editorship and the Economics of Print: Pauline E. Hopkins and the Colored Press Conventions - Andrew Erlandson
6. "Interesting to Ladies": How Foreign Correspondents Made Gossip a Profession - Selina Foltinek and Katrin Horn
Part III: Pedagogies and Practices of the Home
7. Raising Capitalist Citizens: Pecuniary Pedagogies and Belonging in the United States, 1820-1900 - Jaclyn Schultz
8. Genteel Performance, Embodied Knowledge, and the Quest for Status in US American Parlors - Carola Bebermeier
9. Speculative Knowledge: Ellen Richards and Science of the Home, 1870-1911 - Serenity Sutherland
Index -- .
Part I: Capital, Reputation, and Legal Recognition
1. Sometimes it IS worse to be talked about: Epistemic Surplus and Social Capital - Karen Adkins
2. Rumor as Speculative Practice: Reports of Slave Uprisings in the Nineteenth-Century US South - Sebastion Jobs
3. US Immigrants, Remittances, and the Courts, 1904-25 - Atiba Pertilla
Part II: Commerce, Print Culture, and the Circulation of Knowledge4. Epistemic Style and the "Knowing Unknown" of Racial Capitalism in W.E.B. Du Bois's "Scorn" - Alexander Starre
5. Black Editorship and the Economics of Print: Pauline E. Hopkins and the Colored Press Conventions - Andrew Erlandson
6. "Interesting to Ladies": How Foreign Correspondents Made Gossip a Profession - Selina Foltinek and Katrin Horn
Part III: Pedagogies and Practices of the Home
7. Raising Capitalist Citizens: Pecuniary Pedagogies and Belonging in the United States, 1820-1900 - Jaclyn Schultz
8. Genteel Performance, Embodied Knowledge, and the Quest for Status in US American Parlors - Carola Bebermeier
9. Speculative Knowledge: Ellen Richards and Science of the Home, 1870-1911 - Serenity Sutherland
Index -- .
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
economic criticism; embodied knowledge; Gilded Age; gossip; history of knowledge; rumour; social capital; speculation; uncertainty; US American capitalism
Introduction: Managing Knowledge and Capital in the Nineteenth Century - Karin Hoepker and Katrin Horn
Part I: Capital, Reputation, and Legal Recognition
1. Sometimes it IS worse to be talked about: Epistemic Surplus and Social Capital - Karen Adkins
2. Rumor as Speculative Practice: Reports of Slave Uprisings in the Nineteenth-Century US South - Sebastion Jobs
3. US Immigrants, Remittances, and the Courts, 1904-25 - Atiba Pertilla
Part II: Commerce, Print Culture, and the Circulation of Knowledge4. Epistemic Style and the "Knowing Unknown" of Racial Capitalism in W.E.B. Du Bois's "Scorn" - Alexander Starre
5. Black Editorship and the Economics of Print: Pauline E. Hopkins and the Colored Press Conventions - Andrew Erlandson
6. "Interesting to Ladies": How Foreign Correspondents Made Gossip a Profession - Selina Foltinek and Katrin Horn
Part III: Pedagogies and Practices of the Home
7. Raising Capitalist Citizens: Pecuniary Pedagogies and Belonging in the United States, 1820-1900 - Jaclyn Schultz
8. Genteel Performance, Embodied Knowledge, and the Quest for Status in US American Parlors - Carola Bebermeier
9. Speculative Knowledge: Ellen Richards and Science of the Home, 1870-1911 - Serenity Sutherland
Index -- .
Part I: Capital, Reputation, and Legal Recognition
1. Sometimes it IS worse to be talked about: Epistemic Surplus and Social Capital - Karen Adkins
2. Rumor as Speculative Practice: Reports of Slave Uprisings in the Nineteenth-Century US South - Sebastion Jobs
3. US Immigrants, Remittances, and the Courts, 1904-25 - Atiba Pertilla
Part II: Commerce, Print Culture, and the Circulation of Knowledge4. Epistemic Style and the "Knowing Unknown" of Racial Capitalism in W.E.B. Du Bois's "Scorn" - Alexander Starre
5. Black Editorship and the Economics of Print: Pauline E. Hopkins and the Colored Press Conventions - Andrew Erlandson
6. "Interesting to Ladies": How Foreign Correspondents Made Gossip a Profession - Selina Foltinek and Katrin Horn
Part III: Pedagogies and Practices of the Home
7. Raising Capitalist Citizens: Pecuniary Pedagogies and Belonging in the United States, 1820-1900 - Jaclyn Schultz
8. Genteel Performance, Embodied Knowledge, and the Quest for Status in US American Parlors - Carola Bebermeier
9. Speculative Knowledge: Ellen Richards and Science of the Home, 1870-1911 - Serenity Sutherland
Index -- .
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.