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Staples, Markets, and Cultural Change

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This new edition of Harold Innis's essays, published on the occasion of his centenary, assembles his most significant and representative writing. Included are many of Innis's essays on cultural iss...
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  • 19 May 1995
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This new edition of Harold Innis's essays, published on the occasion of his centenary, assembles his most significant and representative writing. Included are many of Innis's essays on cultural issues and economic development - subjects he explored throughout his life - that have not been readily accessible before.

At the start of his career Innis set out to explain the significance of price rigidities in the cultural, social, and political institutions of new countries; by the end of his intellectual journey he had become one of the most influential critics of modernity. The essays in this collection address a variety of themes, including the rise of industrialism and the expansion of international markets, staples trades, critical factors in Canadian development, metropolitanism and nationality, the problems of adjustment, the political economy of communications, the economics of cultural change, and Innis's conception of the role of the intellectual as citizen.

Innis succeeded as few others have in providing an astute and comprehensive account of the economic and social forces shaping modernity. His abiding interest in the contradictory and unintended consequences of markets in general - the dominant structure of modern economic activity - gave rise to the rich legacy of his prodigious output.

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Price: $49.95
Pages: 576
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 19 May 1995
ISBN: 9780773513020
Format: Paperback
BISACs: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Public Finance, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Development / Economic Development
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Daniel Drache is professor emeritus of political science at York University and senior fellow of the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies.