The Exchange: The BHC Weblog


The Journal of Historical Research in Marketing has issued a call for papers for a special issue focused on the history of Canadian marketing. Topics include:
* Canadian marketing history
* Periodization in Canadian marketing
* How Canadian economic and business history shaped Canadian marketing
* The impact of marketing boards, reports of Royal Commissions, Canada-US trade controversies
* Marketing and the Canadian household — changes over time
* Advertising history in Canada
* Retailing history in Canada
The submission deadline for this special issue is October 30, 2010, with an expected publication date of August 2011. For full details, see the journal's Website.

 

Tip of the hat to Andrew Smith's blog.

In honor of Earth Day, some links to work by business historians on environmental history:

Christine Meisner Rosen and Christopher Sellers, Introduction to Business History Review special issue on business and the environment (Winter 1999);

Christine Meisner Rosen, "Doing Business in the Age of Global Climate Change," Enterprise & Society special issue (June 2007) (subscription required to view full text);

Nature Incorporated: Business Historians and Environmental Change (German Historical Institute).

See also:
Harriet Ritvo, The Dawn of Green: Manchester, Thirlmire, and Modern Environmentalism (University of Chicago Press, 2009);
Richard Judd, The Untilled Garden: Natural History and the Spirit of Conservation in America, 1740-1840 (Cambridge University Press, 2009).


H-Business, the BHC's H-Net-affiliated email list, has recently appointed Tracey Deutsch of the University of Minnesota as its new Reviews Editor.  Professor Deutsch would be happy to hear from business and economic historians interested in reviewing for the list; please send an email outlining your areas of expertise to her at tdeutsch@umn.edu.


The 2010 Pulitzer Prize for History has been awarded to Liaquat Ahamed for Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World (The Penguin Press)--in the words of the Committee, "a compelling account of how four powerful bankers played crucial roles in triggering the Great Depression and ultimately transforming the United States into the world’s financial leader."  The Prize in Biography or Autobiography was awarded to T. J. Stiles for The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt (Alfred A. Knopf, 2009) for  "a penetrating portrait of a complex, self-made titan who revolutionized transportation, amassed vast wealth and shaped the economic world in ways still felt today." Lords of Finance was also named a Business Book of the Year in 2009, while The First Tycoon won the 2009 National Book Award. The two books have been widely reviewed; see here for Ahamed and here for Stiles.

Business history was amply represented at the recently concluded Organization of American Historians' meeting in Washington, DC.  In addition to specific single papers, several sessions in particular will be of interest: "State of the Field: The History of Capitalism," moderated by Bethany Moreton, University of Georgia, featured discussion by Sven Beckert, Harvard University; Colleen A. Dunlavy, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Seth Rockman, Brown University; and Julia Ott, New School University. "The Commerce of Social Change: Business, Consumer Culture, and American Politics, 1950-1980," included papers by Rob Goldberg, University of Pennsylvania; Nicolaas Mink, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and Alex Cummings, Vassar College, and commentary by Susannah Walker, Virginia Wesleyan College.“Strive and Succeed”; Or, Taking Alternative Routes to American Respectability" was chaired by Pamela Laird, University of Colorado, Denver, with commentary provided by Scott Sandage, Carnegie Mellon University; presenters were Wendy Gamber, Indiana University; Jocelyn Wills, Brooklyn College, City University of New York; and Will Cooley, Walsh University.

NEP is an announcement service that filters information on new additions to Research Papers in Economics (RePEc) into edited reports; many BHC members are familiar with the list edited by Bernardo Batiz-Lazo of the University of Leicester, who aggregates the subset of papers in Business, Economic, and Financial History (NEP-HIS). He has now created a NEP-HIS blog, in which he chooses one paper from among recent listings as a topic for discussion. The current paper is "Multinational Strategies and Developing Countries in Historical Perspective," by Geoffrey Jones of the Harvard Business School.

At its recent meeting, the Business History Conference awarded the Hagley Prize for the best book in business history to David Suisman, for his Selling Sounds:The Commercial Revolution in American Music (Harvard University Press, 2009). You can read or hear an interview with Suisman about the book on American Public Media's Marketplace.

Bethany Moreton of the University of Georgia has won the Frederick Jackson Turner Prize of the Organization of American Historians for her book, To Serve God and Wal-Mart: The Making of Christian Free Enterprise. Professor Moreton was a member of the local arrangements committee for the 2010 BHC meeting in Athens, Georgia.

The Centre for Regulation and Market Analysis at the University of South Australia in Adelaide will be holding its first business history conference on July 7-9, 2010. The CRMS describes the conference as a forum to showcase the latest in business history research from distinguished scholars currently studying the field. Plenary speakers, whose names will be familiar to many BHC members, include Joost Dankers, Susanna Fellman, Leslie Hannah, Will Hausman, Philip Scranton, and John Wilson. For more information, please visit the CRMS conference website.

The topic of the January 2010 issue of the OAH Magazine of History is “Business History.” As former BHC president Pamela Laird suggests in her foreword, readers might consider “how familiar the world of business—including advertising—is to students and yet how rarely we think about that subject in historical terms.” Articles include:

FOREWORD
Bringing in Business History Front and Center
Pamela Walker Laird

ARTICLES
Classic Issues and Fresh Themes in Business History
Philip Scranton

American Manufacturing, 1850-1930: A Business History Approach
Mansel Blackford

Business History in the Teaching American History Program
Stuart D. Hobbs

Newspapers, Radio, and the Business of Media in the United States
Michael Stamm

Selling Black Beauty: African American Modeling Agencies and Charm Schools in Postwar America
Malia McAndrew

Robert Noyce, Silicon Valley, and the Teamwork Behind the High-Technology Revolution
Leslie Berlin

Although full access requires a subscription, the extensive teaching tools are freely available.