Karl Polanyi Popular Books

Karl Polanyi Biography & Facts

Karl Paul Polanyi (; Hungarian: Polányi Károly [ˈpolaːɲi ˈkaːroj]; 25 October 1886 – 23 April 1964), was an Austro-Hungarian economic anthropologist, economic sociologist, and politician, best known for his book The Great Transformation, which questions the conceptual validity of self-regulating markets. In his writings, Polanyi advances the concept of the Double Movement, which refers to the dialectical process of marketization and push for social protection against that marketization. He argues that market-based societies in modern Europe were not inevitable but historically contingent. Polanyi is remembered best as the originator of substantivism, a cultural version of economics, which emphasizes the way economies are embedded in society and culture. This opinion is counter to mainstream economics but is popular in anthropology, economic history, economic sociology and political science. Polanyi's approach to the ancient economies has been applied to a variety of cases, such as Pre-Columbian America and ancient Mesopotamia, although its utility to the study of ancient societies in general has been questioned. Polanyi's The Great Transformation became a model for historical sociology. His theories eventually became the foundation for the economic democracy movement. Polanyi was active in politics, and helped found the National Citizens' Radical Party in 1914, serving as its secretary. Early life Polanyi was born into a Jewish family. His younger brother was Michael Polanyi, a philosopher, and his niece was Eva Zeisel, a world-renowned ceramist. He was born in Vienna, at the time the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. His father, Mihály Pollacsek, was a railway entrepreneur. Mihály never changed the name Pollacsek, and is buried in the Jewish cemetery in Budapest. Mihály died in January 1905, which was an emotional shock to Karl, and he commemorated the anniversary of Mihály's death throughout his life. Karl and Michael Polanyi's mother was Cecília Wohl. The name change to Polanyi was made by Karl and his siblings. Polanyi was well educated despite the ups and downs of his father's fortune, and he immersed himself in Budapest's active intellectual and artistic scene. Early career Polanyi founded the radical and influential Galileo Circle while at the University of Budapest, a club which would have far reaching effects on Hungarian intellectual thought. During this time, he was actively engaged with other notable thinkers, such as György Lukács, Oszkár Jászi, and Karl Mannheim. Polanyi graduated from Budapest University in 1912 with a doctorate in Law. In 1914, he helped found the National Citizens' Radical Party of Hungary and served as its secretary. Polanyi was a cavalry officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army in World War I, in active service at the Russian Front and hospitalized in Budapest. Polanyi supported the republican government of Mihály Károlyi and its Social Democratic regime. The republic was short-lived, however, and when Béla Kun toppled the Karolyi government to create the Hungarian Soviet Republic, Polanyi left for Vienna. In Vienna From 1924 to 1933, he was employed as a senior editor of the prestigious Der Österreichische Volkswirt (The Austrian Economist) magazine. It was at this time that he first began criticizing the Austrian School of economists, who he felt created abstract models which lost sight of the organic, interrelated reality of economic processes. Polanyi himself was attracted to Fabianism and the works of G. D. H. Cole. It was also during this period that Polanyi grew interested in Christian socialism. He married the communist revolutionary Ilona Duczyńska, of Polish-Hungarian background. Their daughter Kari Polanyi Levitt carried on the family tradition of economic academic research. In London Polanyi was asked to resign from Der Oesterreichische Volkswirt because the liberal publisher of the journal could not keep on a prominent socialist after the accession of Hitler to office in January 1933 and the suspension of the Austrian parliament by the rising tide of clerical fascism in Austria. He left for London in 1933, where he earned a living as a journalist and tutor and obtained a position as a lecturer for the Workers' Educational Association in 1936. His lecture notes contained the research for what later became The Great Transformation. However, he would not start writing this work until 1940, when he moved to Vermont to take up a position at Bennington College. The book was published in 1944, to great acclaim. In it, Polanyi described the enclosure process in England and the creation of the contemporary economic system at the beginning of the 19th century. United States and Canada Polanyi joined the staff of Bennington College in 1940, teaching a series of five timely lectures on the "Present Age of Transformation". The lectures "The Passing of the 19th Century", "The Trend Towards an Integrated Society", "The Breakdown of the International System", "Is America an Exception?", and "Marxism and the Inner History of the Russian Revolution" took place during the early stages of World War II. Polanyi participated in Bennington's Humanism Lecture Series (1941) and Bennington College's Lecture Series (1943) where his topic was "Jean Jacques Rousseau: Or Is a Free Society Possible?" After the war, Polanyi received a teaching position at Columbia University (1947–1953). However, his wife, Ilona Duczyńska (1897–1978), had a background as a former communist, which made gaining an entrance visa in the United States impossible. As a result, they moved to Canada, and Polanyi commuted to New York City. In the early 1950s, Polanyi received a large grant from the Ford Foundation to study the economic systems of ancient empires. Having described the emergence of the modern economic system, Polanyi now sought to understand how "the economy" emerged as a distinct sphere in the distant past. His seminar at Columbia drew several famous scholars and influenced a generation of teachers, resulting in the 1957 volume Trade and Market in the Early Empires. Polanyi continued to write in his later years and established a new journal entitled Coexistence. In Canada he lived in Pickering, Ontario, where he died in 1964. Selected works "Socialist Accounting" (1922) "The Essence of Fascism" (1933–1934); article The Great Transformation (1944) "Universal Capitalism or Regional Planning?", The London Quarterly of World Affairs, vol. 10 (3) (1945) Trade and Market in the Early Empires (1957, edited and with contributions by others) Dahomey and the Slave Trade (1966) George Dalton (ed), Primitive, Archaic, and Modern Economics: Essays of Karl Polanyi (New York: Doubleday & Company, 1968); collected essays and selections from his work. Harry W. Pearson (ed.), The Livelihood of Man (Academic Press, 1977) Karl Polanyi, For a New West: Essays, 1919–1958 (Polity Press, 2014), ISBN 978-0745684444 Gareth Dale (ed), Karl Polanyi: The Hungarian Writing.... Discover the Karl Polanyi popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Karl Polanyi books.

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  • Karl Polanyi synopsis, comments

    Karl Polanyi

    Gareth Dale

    Karl Polanyi's The Great Transformation is generally acclaimed as being among the most influential works of economic history in the twentieth century, and remains as vital in the c...

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    The Moral Economists

    Tim Rogan

    A fresh look at how three important twentiethcentury British thinkers viewed capitalism through a moral rather than material lensWhat’s wrong with capitalism? Answers to that quest...

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    Penser la marchandisation du monde avec Karl Polanyi

    Richard Sobel

    Dans La grande transformation, Karl Polanyi rappelle qu'aucune société humaine ne peut durablement exister sans qu'un système assure une forme d'ordre dans la production, la distri...

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    Karl Polanyi

    Fouad Sabry

    Qui est Karl PolanyiKarl Paul Polanyi était un anthropologue économique, un sociologue économique et un homme politique austrohongrois. Il est particulièrement connu pour son ouvra...

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    Karl Polanyi

    Fouad Sabry

    Wer ist Karl PolanyiKarl Paul Polanyi war ein Wirtschaftsanthropologe, Wirtschaftssoziologe und Politiker aus ÖsterreichUngarn. Besonders bekannt ist er für sein Werk „The Great Tr...

  • Karl Polanyi and the Contemporary Political Crisis synopsis, comments

    Karl Polanyi and the Contemporary Political Crisis

    Peadar Kirby

    Has politics reached breaking point? Rather than defending liberalism or abandoning it, how can a socially just and ecological alternative be built? Peadar Kirby investigates the ...

  • Reconstructing Karl Polanyi synopsis, comments

    Reconstructing Karl Polanyi

    Gareth Dale

    Shortlisted for the Deutscher Memorial Prize 2017 Karl Polanyi's contribution to political economy and social science is immeasurable. In Reconstructing Karl Polanyi, Gareth Dale,...

  • Karl Polanyi synopsis, comments

    Karl Polanyi

    Fouad Sabry

    Quién es Karl PolanyiKarl Paul Polanyi fue un antropólogo económico, sociólogo económico y político de AustriaHungría. Es especialmente conocido por su trabajo, La Gran Transformac...

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    Karl Polanyi

    Gareth Dale

    Karl Polanyi (1886–1964) was one of the twentieth century's most original interpreters of the market economy. His penetrating analysis of globalization's disruptions and the Great ...

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    Karl Polanyi

    Armin Thurnher, Brigitte Aulenbacher, Markus Marterbauer & Andreas Novy

    Ökonomie. Geboren in Wien, aufgewachsen in Budapest, kehrte er nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg in seine Geburtsstadt zurück. 1933 emigrierte er nach England und ging später in die USA. D...

  • Karl Polanyi synopsis, comments

    Karl Polanyi

    Fouad Sabry

    Who is Karl PolanyiKarl Paul Polanyi was an economic anthropologist, economic sociologist, and politician from AustriaHungary. He is especially wellknown for his work, The Great Tr...

  • Karl Polanyi and the Paradoxes of the Double Movement synopsis, comments

    Karl Polanyi and the Paradoxes of the Double Movement

    John Vail

    This book offers a critical reconstruction of the double movement, the central thesis of Karl Polanyi’s The Great Transformation, one of the most influential books of the 20th cent...

  • Karl Polanyi synopsis, comments

    Karl Polanyi

    Armin Thurnher, Aulenbacher, Markus Marterbauer, Andreas Novy & Kari Polanyi Levitt

    On 8 May 2018, the International Karl Polanyi Society was founded in Vienna. This marked the beginning of a new phase of engagement with a thinker who had already come to be regard...

  • Transformation als historischer Prozess synopsis, comments

    Transformation als historischer Prozess

    Mara Rebmann & Juliane Marmuth

    The Great Transformation – diese Begrifflichkeit beschreibt den Übergang von „integrierten“ Gesellschaften zur nicht integrierten Gesellschaft vom Typ der freien Marktwirtschaft. P...