Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 General Topics Chapter 3 Rational Behavior and Economic Incentives Chapter 4 Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity Cost Chapter 5 Markets Chapter 6 Supply and Demand Chapter 7 Specialization Chapter 8 Gains from Exchange Chapter 9 Prices Part 10 Microeconomic Topics Chapter 11 Price Elasticity Chapter 12 Consumption Chapter 13 Production Chapter 14 Costs Chapter 15 Profits Chapter 16 Efficiency, Productivity, and Innovation Chapter 17 Property Rights and the Rule of Law Chapter 18 Externalities Chapter 19 Firms Chapter 20 Perfect Competition and Monopolistic Competition Chapter 21 Monopoly and Oligopoly Part 22 Macroeconomic Topics Chapter 23 Economic Growth Chapter 24 Business Cycle Chapter 25 Capital and Investment Chapter 26 Human Capital Chapter 27 Entrepreneurs Chapter 28 Inflation Chapter 29 Employment Chapter 30 Personal Income Chapter 31 Money Chapter 32 Banking Chapter 33 Government Revenue and Expenditure Chapter 34 Government Intervention Chapter 35 Inequality and Poverty Chapter 36 Globalization Chapter 37 Command Economies
Milica Bookman is a professor of economics at St. Joseph's University. Aleksandra Bookman is studying history and producing at New York University.
Using movie clips and fiction passages to illustrate economic
principles is a terrific idea that really livens up the classroom.
This approach will work very well.
*Bradley Schiller, professor of economics at American University,
author of The Macro Economy Today and The Micro Economy Today*
Economics in Film and Fiction is an intriguing and original
supplement for the principles course. It should help pique student
interest in economics and stimulate lively class discussion.
*Anthony Patrick O'Brien, professor of economics, Lehigh
University; co-author of Macroeconomics*
The authors have done a good job of developing economic
applications that are part of most students' upbringing and
therefore more interesting to them than the standard discussions of
current economic events of no immediate relevance to them. A
particularly good feature of the book is that it is self-contained
with all clips and passages nicely summarized.
*William Holmes, Professor of Economics at Temple University*
A Chinese proverb says "I hear and I forget. I see and I remember.
I do and I understand." Economics in Film and Fiction is a
wonderful teaching tool because students see economic concepts
practiced in a familiar context through a medium they enjoy. They
will remember and understand the ideas in a deeper and more
permanent way.
*Larry Singell, professor of economics at the University of Oregon*
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