Jonathan Levy is a professor in the Department of History and the John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago. His first book, Freaks of Fortune: The Emerging World of Capitalism and Risk in America, won the Organization of American Historians’ Frederick Jackson Turner Award, Ellis W. Hawley Prize, and Avery O. Craven Award, as well as the American Society for Legal History’s William Nelson Cromwell Book Prize. He lives in Chicago, Illinois.
“Prodigiously researched, elegantly written, and relentlessly
interesting . . . Ages of American Capitalism deftly
weaves strands of economic, business, political, social and
intellectual history into an engaging, accessible narrative.”—The
Washington Post
“Prodigious . . . a vivid social and geopolitical
history.”—Boston Review
“It is impossible to understand the United States without
understanding its economic history. This book, from one of the
nation’s foremost historians of capitalism, brings that important
and endlessly fascinating story to life, taking the reader on a
whirlwind tour of plantations and factories, boardrooms and
government offices. If you want to get a better sense of where we
are, think about how we got here.”—Sven Beckert, author of Empire
of Cotton
“Ages of American Capitalism is a monumental achievement. Jonathan
Levy has crafted an economic history that rivals Eric Hobsbawm’s
and Charles Kindleberger’s in ambition, augmented by a thorough
analysis of the legal and political currents that have shaped
economic change across 350 years.”—Zachary D. Carter, author of The
Price of Peace
“A remarkably shrewd, sweeping, and entertaining history of
American capitalism that strikes at the heart of one of the great
American fallacies: that markets can ever be separated from
society, politics, and history.”—Richard White, author of The
Republic for Which It Stands
“American capitalism is in crisis. To know how to get out of the
mess, you need to know how we got into it. That takes a historian.
This is a book with the ambition and originality of Adam Smith’s
Wealth of Nations. . . . Unputdownable.”—James Robinson, co-author
of Why Nations Fail
“In this monumental work, Jonathan Levy has written a history of
economic life in the United States that puts capital back at the
center of our nation’s history. In his sophisticated yet accessible
assessment, Levy shows how the institutions that define the meaning
and purpose of capital have evolved rather dramatically over the
past few centuries, transforming not only the nation but the
meaning of capitalism itself. Ages of American Capitalism is a
splendid book.”—Stephen Mihm, author of A Nation of
Counterfeiters
“The sprawling saga of a national economy that has gone through
several phases, the lion’s share of ownership becoming ever
narrower . . . Levy is an uncommonly lucid interpreter of numbers
and theories and a nimble explainer. A rewarding exercise in
understanding where we are and how we got there.”—Kirkus Reviews
(starred review)
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