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This collection of reported British shareholder meetings originally
published between 1800 and 1920 provides scholars and students new
insight into the development of big businesses in the world today.
Although such meetings comprised only one of many facets of
companies’ intersections with their publics during the nineteenth
century, they regularly provide a rich insight into each industry.
This collection offers a breadth of examples, including utilities,
land companies, and theatres as well as mining, insurance, banking,
and transport, to allow readers to gain a sense of the protean
nature of incorporation during the long nineteenth century.
Following a general introduction, the book is divided into four
sections: Doing the Business (on day-to-day financial operations),
Politics (on corporate activities than intersected with British
political and imperial concerns), Failure (on the communication and
reception of financial ruin), and Mergers and Acquisitions (on
shareholders’ responses to proposed mergers). Short introductions
to each document provides the necessary information about each
company and its constituents. This title will be of great interest
to students of History, Business, and Finance.
This volume uses the extreme case of misers to examine interlocking
categories that undergirded the emergence of modern British
society, including new perspectives on charity, morality, and
marriage; new representations of passion and sympathy; and new
modes of saving, spending, and investment. Misers surveys this
class of people-as invented and interpreted in sermons, poems,
novels, and plays; analyzed by economists and philosophers; and
profiled in obituaries and biographies-to explore how British
attitudes about saving money shifted between 1700 and 1860. As
opposed to the century before, the nineteenth century witnessed a
new appreciation for misers, as economists credited them with
adding to the nation's stock of capital and novelists newly
imagined their capacity to empathize with fellow human beings.
These characters shared the spotlight with real people who
posthumously donned that label, populating into a cottage industry
of miser biographies by the 1850s. By the time A Christmas Carol
appeared in 1843, many Victorians had come to embrace misers as
links that connected one generation's extreme saving with the next
generation's virtuous spending. With a broad chronological period,
this volume is useful for students and scholars interested in
representation of misers in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century
Britain.
By the eve of the Great Depression, there existed in America the
equivalent of a policy for every man, woman and child, and in
Britain it grew from its narrow aristocratic base to cover all
social classes. This primary resource collection is the first
comparative history of British and American life insurance
industries.
By the eve of the Great Depression, there existed in America the
equivalent of a policy for every man, woman and child, and in
Britain it grew from its narrow aristocratic base to cover all
social classes. This primary resource collection is the first
comparative history of British and American life insurance
industries.
By the eve of the Great Depression, there existed in America the
equivalent of a policy for every man, woman and child, and in
Britain it grew from its narrow aristocratic base to cover all
social classes. This primary resource collection is the first
comparative history of British and American life insurance
industries.
By the eve of the Great Depression, there existed in America the
equivalent of a policy for every man, woman and child, and in
Britain it grew from its narrow aristocratic base to cover all
social classes. This primary resource collection is the first
comparative history of British and American life insurance
industries.
By the eve of the Great Depression, there existed in America the
equivalent of a policy for every man, woman and child, and in
Britain it grew from its narrow aristocratic base to cover all
social classes. This primary resource collection is the first
comparative history of British and American life insurance
industries.
By the eve of the Great Depression, there existed in America the
equivalent of a policy for every man, woman and child, and in
Britain it grew from its narrow aristocratic base to cover all
social classes. This primary resource collection is the first
comparative history of British and American life insurance
industries.
During the century after 1750, Great Britain absorbed much of the
world's supply of gold into its pockets, cupboards, and coffers
when it became the only major country to adopt the gold standard as
the sole basis of its currency. Over the same period, the nation's
emergence was marked by a powerful combination of Protestantism,
commerce, and military might, alongside preservation of its older
social hierarchy. In this rich and broad-ranging work, Timothy
Alborn argues for a close connection between gold and Britain's
national identity. Beginning with Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations,
which validated Britain's position as an economic powerhouse, and
running through the mid-nineteenth century gold rushes in
California and Australia, Alborn draws on contemporary descriptions
of gold's value to highlight its role in financial, political, and
cultural realms. He begins by narrating British interests in gold
mining globally to enable the smooth operation of the gold
standard. In addition to explaining the metal's function in
finance, he explores its uses in war expenditure, foreign trade,
religious observance, and ornamentation at home and abroad. Britons
criticized foreign cultures for their wasteful and inappropriate
uses of gold, even as it became a prominent symbol of status in
more traditional features of British society, including its royal
family, aristocracy, and military. Although Britain had been
ambivalent in its embrace of gold, ultimately it enabled the nation
to become the world's most modern economy and to extend its
imperial reach around the globe. All That Glittered tells the story
of gold as both a marker of value and a valuable commodity, while
providing a new window onto Britain's ascendance after the 1750s.
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