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Late Victorian visual reasoning and Alfred Marshall's economic science

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2005

SIMON COOK
Affiliation:
UWP, Duke University, Bell Tower/East Campus, Box 90025, Durham, NC, 27708-0025, USA.

Abstract

Today the economic diagram is employed universally in teaching and research by professional economists. Yet the history of its construction shows that much that has been regarded as distinctive of twentieth-century visual culture was prefigured in the nineteenth. This paper will place the construction of the first economic diagrams by Alfred Marshall in the context both of contemporary visual technologies developed in other moral sciences, and of his wider theory of industrial production. The paper will argue that an understanding of the background to the historical graphs, constructed by the Cambridge political economist from the late 1860s onwards, will necessitate a revision of the narrative of modern visual reasoning, as recently advanced by Lev Manovich.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 British Society for the History of Science

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