Mark Pittenger - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Mark Pittenger
Business History Review, 2003
The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 2014
Labor Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, 2004
... Issue 87 (Nov 2004). Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwe... more ... Issue 87 (Nov 2004). Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwest, 1880-1930 [Book Review]. ... Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwest, 1880-1930 [Book Review] [online]. Labour History, No. ...
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 2001
The Journal of American History, 1999
... Utopianism and radicalism in a reforming America, 1888-1918. Post a Comment. CONTRIBUTORS: Au... more ... Utopianism and radicalism in a reforming America, 1888-1918. Post a Comment. CONTRIBUTORS: Author: Shor, Francis Robert. PUBLISHER: Greenwood Press (Westport, Conn.). SERIES TITLE: YEAR: 1997. PUB TYPE: Book (ISBN 0313303797 ). ...
The Journal of American History, 1998
The Journal of American History, 1993
The Journal of American History, 2002
Journal of American History, 2007
... an oblique reference in the text and Justus D. Doenecke and Leo Ribuffo are cited, but the wo... more ... an oblique reference in the text and Justus D. Doenecke and Leo Ribuffo are cited, but the works of Radosh, Glen Jeansonne, Philip Jen-kins, Francis MacDonnell, and Geoffrey S. Smith are conspicuously absent from the foot-notes (the book has no ... By David A. Badillo. ...
Business History Review, 2003
The American Historical Review, 2001
The American Historical Review, 1993
An academic directory and search engine.
The American Historical Review, 1999
... 2 RADICAL RHETORIC AND AMERICAN COMMUNITY this award even recognize the society they sacrific... more ... 2 RADICAL RHETORIC AND AMERICAN COMMUNITY this award even recognize the society they sacrificed to establish ... The news here lies in the fact that such an ominous portent, delivered by a man who has occupied a significant place on the public stage for as long as any ...
Radical History Review, 1986
... American socialist intellectuals, like their European comrades, drew heavily on the ideas of ... more ... American socialist intellectuals, like their European comrades, drew heavily on the ideas of mainstream natural and social science - particularly on the work of ... 4. On women in the Socialist Party, see Mari Jo Buhle, Women and American Socialism, 1870-1920 (Urbana, II., 1981). ...
American Studies, 1987
... to the eclectic and vitad radicalism of Greenwich Village itself.8. Eastman and Dell at the M... more ... to the eclectic and vitad radicalism of Greenwich Village itself.8. Eastman and Dell at the Masses, Oppenheim and Van Wyck Brooks at the Seven Arts, and Fraina at the New Review all attacked the ideas and spirit of socialist evolutionism, while Arthur Bullard's novels A Man's ...
Modern Intellectual History, 2008
Triumphant capitalism seems nowadays to be a fact of nature, requiring no name and admitting, as ... more Triumphant capitalism seems nowadays to be a fact of nature, requiring no name and admitting, as Margaret Thatcher famously put it, of “no alternative.” Neither American Capitalism nor Transcending Capitalism shrinks from “naming the system,” as perplexed New Leftists once struggled to do when trying to articulate their own alternative. But having named it, neither book takes as its primary task to define or fully describe that economic and sociocultural system. Rather, both are concerned principally with how twentieth-century American intellectuals, broadly construed, oriented and addressed themselves to the idea of capitalism in light of their respective historical moments’ shifting economic and social realities. Some reformist thinkers came to deny the efficacy of “capitalism” for describing a political–economic order which they believed to be rapidly passing away; their rivals to the right, meanwhile, mounted a reinvigorated defense of the term and its classical implications. Wh...
The Journal of American Culture, 1991
... Spencer, First Principles (New York: The De Witt Revolving Fund, Incorporated, 1959), 359, 53... more ... Spencer, First Principles (New York: The De Witt Revolving Fund, Incorporated, 1959), 359, 537; and Progress: Its Law and Cause,'' in JDY Peel, ed., Herbert Spencer on Social Evolution (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1972), 39; Edmond Kelly, Twentieth ...
American Studies, 1994
... But England's Allan Sternsocialist, consulting engineer, and indomitable whiteAmerican... more ... But England's Allan Sternsocialist, consulting engineer, and indomitable whiteAmericanre-deems the degenerated "Merucaan" (that is, "American") race, whom he discov-ers in a great western abyss, and guides them from savagery and barbarism to ...
Business History Review, 2003
The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 2014
Labor Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, 2004
... Issue 87 (Nov 2004). Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwe... more ... Issue 87 (Nov 2004). Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwest, 1880-1930 [Book Review]. ... Indispensable Outcasts: Hobo Workers and Community in the American Midwest, 1880-1930 [Book Review] [online]. Labour History, No. ...
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 2001
The Journal of American History, 1999
... Utopianism and radicalism in a reforming America, 1888-1918. Post a Comment. CONTRIBUTORS: Au... more ... Utopianism and radicalism in a reforming America, 1888-1918. Post a Comment. CONTRIBUTORS: Author: Shor, Francis Robert. PUBLISHER: Greenwood Press (Westport, Conn.). SERIES TITLE: YEAR: 1997. PUB TYPE: Book (ISBN 0313303797 ). ...
The Journal of American History, 1998
The Journal of American History, 1993
The Journal of American History, 2002
Journal of American History, 2007
... an oblique reference in the text and Justus D. Doenecke and Leo Ribuffo are cited, but the wo... more ... an oblique reference in the text and Justus D. Doenecke and Leo Ribuffo are cited, but the works of Radosh, Glen Jeansonne, Philip Jen-kins, Francis MacDonnell, and Geoffrey S. Smith are conspicuously absent from the foot-notes (the book has no ... By David A. Badillo. ...
Business History Review, 2003
The American Historical Review, 2001
The American Historical Review, 1993
An academic directory and search engine.
The American Historical Review, 1999
... 2 RADICAL RHETORIC AND AMERICAN COMMUNITY this award even recognize the society they sacrific... more ... 2 RADICAL RHETORIC AND AMERICAN COMMUNITY this award even recognize the society they sacrificed to establish ... The news here lies in the fact that such an ominous portent, delivered by a man who has occupied a significant place on the public stage for as long as any ...
Radical History Review, 1986
... American socialist intellectuals, like their European comrades, drew heavily on the ideas of ... more ... American socialist intellectuals, like their European comrades, drew heavily on the ideas of mainstream natural and social science - particularly on the work of ... 4. On women in the Socialist Party, see Mari Jo Buhle, Women and American Socialism, 1870-1920 (Urbana, II., 1981). ...
American Studies, 1987
... to the eclectic and vitad radicalism of Greenwich Village itself.8. Eastman and Dell at the M... more ... to the eclectic and vitad radicalism of Greenwich Village itself.8. Eastman and Dell at the Masses, Oppenheim and Van Wyck Brooks at the Seven Arts, and Fraina at the New Review all attacked the ideas and spirit of socialist evolutionism, while Arthur Bullard's novels A Man's ...
Modern Intellectual History, 2008
Triumphant capitalism seems nowadays to be a fact of nature, requiring no name and admitting, as ... more Triumphant capitalism seems nowadays to be a fact of nature, requiring no name and admitting, as Margaret Thatcher famously put it, of “no alternative.” Neither American Capitalism nor Transcending Capitalism shrinks from “naming the system,” as perplexed New Leftists once struggled to do when trying to articulate their own alternative. But having named it, neither book takes as its primary task to define or fully describe that economic and sociocultural system. Rather, both are concerned principally with how twentieth-century American intellectuals, broadly construed, oriented and addressed themselves to the idea of capitalism in light of their respective historical moments’ shifting economic and social realities. Some reformist thinkers came to deny the efficacy of “capitalism” for describing a political–economic order which they believed to be rapidly passing away; their rivals to the right, meanwhile, mounted a reinvigorated defense of the term and its classical implications. Wh...
The Journal of American Culture, 1991
... Spencer, First Principles (New York: The De Witt Revolving Fund, Incorporated, 1959), 359, 53... more ... Spencer, First Principles (New York: The De Witt Revolving Fund, Incorporated, 1959), 359, 537; and Progress: Its Law and Cause,'' in JDY Peel, ed., Herbert Spencer on Social Evolution (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1972), 39; Edmond Kelly, Twentieth ...
American Studies, 1994
... But England's Allan Sternsocialist, consulting engineer, and indomitable whiteAmerican... more ... But England's Allan Sternsocialist, consulting engineer, and indomitable whiteAmericanre-deems the degenerated "Merucaan" (that is, "American") race, whom he discov-ers in a great western abyss, and guides them from savagery and barbarism to ...