The aim of the anthology is to question the poetic dimension of Pound’s economics and to render it accessible for the study and understanding of economics as such. As A. David Moody argues in his exemplary contribution, when Pound affirmethat poets ought to occupy themselves with economic matters, he meant “that they should do so as poets, that is, in their poetry”. A firststep towards the realization of what Pound claimed to be a genuine poetic responsibility and an ineluctable artistic obligation is to take a constitutive stance within the realm of economic issues, suspending the common practice of building on consolidated concepts and models that are taken for granted, and applied uncritically to what is assumed to be economic reality. Therefore, the poetic di-mension of Pound’s economic thinking, generating the groundwork for a new approach to economics, is discussed in the contributions to this anthology. Furthermore, Pound’s work is remembered as a contribution to economics in its own right. For the present Pound’s economics is for-gotten – not in that it is not discussed but in that the discussion about it, carried out by economists as well as by other scholars, is firstand foremost based on the said consolidated concepts and models. It then seems to be incomprehensible, unintelligible, hermetic, incongruent, heretical. For that reason its original trait, its source character, remains concealed for now.
Tabla de materias
Foreword
Introduction
Ralf Lüfter
Economics out of Ethics
Ezra Pound – The Economist
A. David Moody
Economics and the Economy of The Cantos
Sebastian Berger
Towards a Poetic Economics: Studies in Ezra Pound’s ‘Poetry with a Hammer’
Leon Surette
Pound: Economic Guru
Bill Freind
From the Oikos to the Cosmos: The Anti – Economics of Ezra Pound
Constitutive Aspects of Ezra Pound’s Economics
Alex Pestell
The Bank of England and the ‘Crime / Ov two Centuries’
Roxana Preda
Gold and / or Humaneness: Pound’s Vision of Civilisation in Canto 97
Peter Liebregts
Ezra Pound, Aristotle and Ancient Greek Economics
Mark Byron
The Poetic Dimension of Economics: Byzantium
Alec Marsh
Pound’s Agrarian Bent: Physiocracy and the Ideological Origins of the Wheat in Our Bread Party
Mark Steven
Ezra Pound and Mr Marx, Karl
Kristin Grogan
Ezra Pound an the Anarchist Economics of Silvio Gesell
Guy Stevenson
‘Money and how it gets the way’: Ezra Pound, Henry Miller and the Economic Process of the 1930s
Abbreviations