01312nam a2200325 i 450099100330503970753620021205144623.0vf bah 020123s|||| it ||| | ita b11786814-39ule_instPARLA224038ExLDip.to Scienze Storiche Filosofiche e Geograficheita945Castronovo, Valerio10077La politica sociale /di Valerio CastronovoRoma :Istituto Luce,19961 videocassetta (VHS) (30 min.) :son.La storia d'Italia del 20. secolo / narrata da Valerio Castronovo, Renzo De Felice, Pietro Scoppola ; regia di Folco Quilici Fa parte di: L'Italia fascistaQuilici, FolcoDe Felice, RenzoScoppola, PietroL'Italia fascista.3.5.b1178681422-01-1409-12-02991003305039707536LE023 VHS 945 III 512023000079874le023-E0.00-no 30000.i1417633612-01-06LE009 VHS STOR.26V.512009000140691le009-E0.00-no 31010.i1203413709-12-02Politica sociale907765UNISALENTOle023le00923-01-02mg -itait 3201026nam a22002291i 450099100278012970753620040325072322.0040624s1973 cy a||||||||||||||||eng b12976751-39ule_instARCHE-093443ExLDip.to Beni CulturaliitaA.t.i. Arché s.c.r.l. Pandora Sicilia s.r.l.938Acts of the international arghaeological symposium ̀The Mycenaeans in the eastern Mediterranean ̀ :Nicosia 27. March - 2. April 1972Nicosia :Department of Antiquities,1973XIV, 410 p. :ill. ;29 cmMiceneiCiviltà.b1297675102-04-1412-07-04991002780129707536LE001 AN XXI 39012001000075256le001C. 1-E0.00-l- 00000.i1358043712-07-04Acts of the international arghaeological symposium ̀The Mycenaeans in the eastern Mediterranean ̀285122UNISALENTOle00112-07-04ma -engcy 0105261nam 22005895 450 991098613230332120250310115235.09783031810022303181002310.1007/978-3-031-81002-2(CKB)37817228200041(MiAaPQ)EBC31955448(Au-PeEL)EBL31955448(DE-He213)978-3-031-81002-2(OCoLC)1510769424(EXLCZ)993781722820004120250310d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLibertarian Literary and Media Criticism Essays in Memory of Paul A. Cantor /edited by Jo Ann Cavallo1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2025.1 online resource (359 pages)9783031810015 3031810015 Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Paul Cantor on Shakespeare’s Rome -- Chapter 3: Why Do You Think That’s Funny?: The Theory of Comedy and the Theory of Valuation -- Chapter 4: A Perfect Ambodexter”: The Roaring Girl and Commercial Self-Fashioning -- Chapter 5: The Alchemy of the Free Market in Ben Jonson’s The Alchemist -- Chapter 6: War and Peace as an Important Contribution to Economics and Methodological Individualism -- Chapter 7: A Wooden Boy and a Lesson in Free Market Economics: How Pinocchio Becomes an Entrepreneur -- Chapter 8: This moral monster state”: Modern Utopianism, Emergent Order, and H. G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds -- Chapter 9: The Nearly Invisible Hand: An Austrian Approach to Teaching Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha -- Chapter 10: Scrooge McDuck: Caricature or Manifesto of the American Capitalist? -- Chapter 11: The Big Screen Takes on the Financial Crisis: An Exploration of Four Films (2011-2015) -- Chapter 12: First Principles on the Final Frontier: Economic Foundations of Science Fiction Television -- Chapter 13: The Big Sky on the Small Screen: Austrian Economics in the Yellowstone Universe -- Chapter 14: Undercover Boss: Do We Need a Kinder, Gentler Capitalism?.“Paul Cantor’s genial and witty presence disguised his profoundly original and daring contribution to the understanding and appreciation of literature. That contribution, which recognized the enormous creativity of free markets and the values of civil life that they engender, might still revive the literary humanities. The essays in this brilliant collection are an earnest of such a revival.” — Frederick Turner, Emeritus, University of Texas at Dallas, Author of Shakespeare’s Twenty-First Century Economics. “This volume represents a significant and much needed intervention into literary studies, cultural studies, and media studies. One might refer to the paradigm that it represents as a new economic criticism.” — Michael Rectenwald, Ph.D., Mises Institute; former NYU Professor and former Hillsdale College Distinguished Fellow. “This collection of essays is a testament to Paul Cantor’s groundbreaking approach in connecting economic theory with cultural imagination, revealing how market dynamics can deepen our understanding of literature and media in ways that ignite intellectual curiosity.” — Allen Mendenhall, Troy University, Author of Literature and Liberty: Essays in Libertarian Literary Criticism. This volume applies libertarian philosophy and free-market economic theory to both literature and media, from early modern drama to novels to comic books, cinema, and television series. Several chapters contrast capitalism with statism, focusing on the market economy versus central planning, freedom versus government coercion. Not surprisingly, the economic theories of Adam Smith, Ludwig von Mises, and F.A. Hayek run through several essays. Contributors also engage with other theorists and writers as diverse as Thomas Hobbes, Charles Darwin, Thomas Huxley, Friedrich Nietzsche, Leo Strauss, and Judith Butler. Jo Ann Cavallo is Professor of Italian at Columbia University, USA. She has published widely on Italian literature and culture, especially Renaissance chivalric epic and popular performance traditions. For the past decade, she has also brought a libertarian perspective to Italian studies through her publications on Marco Polo, Machiavelli, Renaissance fiction, chivalric epic, and Sicilian puppet theater.LiteratureHistory and criticismPolitical sciencePhilosophyCommunicationLiterary CriticismPolitical PhilosophyMedia and CommunicationLiteratureHistory and criticism.Political sciencePhilosophy.Communication.Literary Criticism.Political Philosophy.Media and Communication.801.95Cavallo Jo Ann742396Cavallo1790680MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910986132303321Libertarian Literary and Media Criticism4327408UNINA