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ishouldbestudying

tribunodelaplebe@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 4 months ago

I like everything about this place, even though I have never been here, and know nothing about the area

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finished reading Argentina: de la conquista a la independencia by Carlos Sempat Assadourian (Biblioteca Argentina de Historia y Política, #1)

Carlos Sempat Assadourian: Argentina: de la conquista a la independencia (Hardcover, Español language, 1986, Hyspamerica) No rating

El presente volumen, publicado originalmente en el marco de la Historia Argentina que dirigió Tulio …

Would recomend it just for the fact that it contains plenty of well done maps and demographic information that would otherwise be scattered across many publications on the period. Solid general cover of the colonial period, altough short on the early pre-viceroyalty and pre-colonial periods (understandable given how underdeveloped archeology is on these eras)

Karl Polanyi: The Great Transformation (2001, Beacon Press)

In this classic work of economic history and social theory, Karl Polanyi analyzes the economic …

A redpill if there has ever been one

A solid introduction if you're new to the study of political economy and general economic history. Proves the fact that in the global history of relationships between two intertwined fields, economy and politics, the leading element has been the embodiment of social relations that is the political aspect of any given society and the current predicament of the economic side being the one leading society trough the expansion of global markets is but a temporary feature of our current given society. Basically proves the historicity of capitalism.

Also, the bookwyrm page is wrong, Stiglitz wrote the prologue to this book, the author is austrian economist Karl Polanyi (altough if you've searched for this book you probably know that by now)