The Discovery and Study of a “Corporate Liberalism”
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Business History Review
- Vol. 52 (3), 309-320
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3113733
Abstract
Once the story of modern America seemed relatively simple. On one side stood a business elite defending a market system to which it owed its power and position. On the other stood the “common man,” economically weak but politically capable of forging tools that could alter the workings of market discipline. And between them, waxing and waning in response to “reform” and “counter-reform,” stood the aggregation of political tools that the “common man” had been able to forge. Such was the story told in “liberal” history; and with reversed heroes and villains, the same story was told in “conservative” history. Both assumed a business-government dichotomy, and both ignored or slighted those aspects of modern America that could not be fitted into it.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Getting from Here to ThereForeign Affairs, 1978
- Remaking American valuesBusiness Horizons, 1977
- The Origins of the National Recovery Administration Business, Government, and the Trade Association Issue, 1921-1933The American Historical Review, 1977
- The New American IdeologyAcademy of Management Review, 1977
- Regulation in AmericaBusiness History Review, 1975
- Herbert Hoover, the Commerce Secretariat, and the Vision of an "Associative State," 1921-1928Journal of American History, 1974
- Still the Century of Corporatism?The Review of Politics, 1974
- American Historians and the "Organizational Factor"Canadian Review of American Studies, 1973
- The Emerging Organizational Synthesis In Modern American HistoryBusiness History Review, 1970
- Private Power and American Democracy, by Grant McConnellPolitical Science Quarterly, 1967