"The Spirit of French Capitalism" - A Roundtable Discussion with Charly Coleman, Columbia University
Speaker(s): Charly Coleman, Columbia University
"The Spirit of French Capitalism" - A Roundtable Discussion with Charly Coleman, Columbia University
Hosted by The France-°®åú´«Ã½ Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, °®åú´«Ã½ Global Studies.
Co-sponsored by the Department of History and the Department of French and Italian in the Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages, °®åú´«Ã½.
Please join this roundtable discussion with Charly Coleman, Associate Professor of History at Columbia University.
How did the economy become bound up with faith in infinite wealth creation and obsessive consumption? Drawing on the economic writings of eighteenth-century French theologians, historian Charly Coleman uncovers the surprising influence of the Catholic Church on the development of capitalism. Even during the Enlightenment, a sense of the miraculous did not wither under the cold light of calculation. Scarcity, long regarded as the inescapable fate of a fallen world, gradually gave way to a new belief in heavenly as well as worldly affluence.
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Moderator
, Professor of History, °®åú´«Ã½ and Director for the France-°®åú´«Ã½ Center
Panelists
, J.E. Wallace Sterling Professor in Humanities and Professor, by courtesy, of French and Italian. His research focuses on intellectual history and the history of political culture. His research on the cultural and political origins of the French Revolution has made important contributions to the development of a new understanding of that event and of its significance for the creation of modern politics.
Dan Edelstein, William H. Bonsall Professor in French and Professor, by courtesy, of History. He works for the most part on eighteenth-century France, with research interests in literature, history, political thought, and digital humanities. Most recently, he wrote a book on the history of natural and human rights from the wars of religion to the age of revolution (, University of Chicago Press).
, Director of the °®åú´«Ã½ Center for Law and History and has an appointment (by courtesy) with the °®åú´«Ã½ History Department. She has served as the Jean-Paul Gimon Director of the France-°®åú´«Ã½ Center for Interdisciplinary Studies and has been a visiting professor at Yale Law School, Tel Aviv University Law School, the Université Panthéon-Assas (Paris II) and the École des hautes études en sciences sociales. Before joining the °®åú´«Ã½ Law School faculty in 2003, she was a trial attorney in the Civil Division of the U.S. Department of Justice and clerked for Judge Pierre N. Leval of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
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