Description
An introduction to the Industrial Revolution from a business perspective-how the confluence of technology, labor and management practice, and market expansion set the stage for modern business, entrepreneurship, and trade.
About the Author
Jeff Horn is Associate Professor of History at Manhattan College. He serves on the editorial board for the Proceedings of the Western Society for French History and is a book review editor for the on-line discussion group, H-France. He is the author of two monographs and has published widely, both in French and in English, on 18th- and 19th-Century French history and the emergence of the Industrial Revolution. He was co-convenor of Reconceptualizing the Industrial Revolution, an international conference from which an edited volume will be published in 2007.
Reviews
Horn explains for the general reader how the Industrial Revolution resulted in the system of trade, conquest and colonization practiced by the West up to the present, how Western domestic practices presaged its behavior internationally, and how Western states worked for or against industrialization. He describes the standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, the theoretical and historical foundations of what became a new economy, the impact of technological improvements and the elaboration of the factory system, the reasons why Britain was the first, the realities of dealing with dominant economic powers, the features of industrialization that led to the new world order, and the dynamics of a system set by supply, demand and fashion. * Reference & Research Book News *
Book Information
ISBN 9780313338533
Author Jeff Horn
Format Hardback
Page Count 192
Imprint Greenwood Press
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Weight(grams) 454g