打字猴:1.70377319e+09
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1703773191 18Eric Foner, Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877(NewYork, 1988).
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1703773196 美国商业简史 [:1703771278]
1703773197 美国商业简史 第五章
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1703773199 1On the politics of Big Business Day, see Benjamin Waterhouse, “The Corporate Mobilization against Liberal Reform: Big Business Day, 1980,” in Kim Phillips-Fein and Julian Zelizer, eds., What’s Good for Business: Business andAmerican Politics Since World War II (Oxford, UK: 2012).
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1703773201 2John Steele Gordon, “The Public Be Damned,” American Heritage, Vol. 40,Issue 6, September/October 1989.
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1703773203 3Richard John, “Robber Barons Redux: Antimonopoly Reconsidered,” Enterprise and Society, 13:1, March 2012.
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1703773205 4Kenneth Warren, Big Steel: The First Century of the United States Steel Corporation, 1901–2001 (Pittsburgh, 2001).
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1703773207 5Chandler, The Visible Hand.
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1703773209 6Chandler, The Visible Hand; Taylor, The Transportation Revolution.
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1703773211 7Friedman, A History of American Law.
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1703773213 8On the continental expansion of the railroads, see especially Richard White,Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America (NewYork, 2011).
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1703773215 9Glenn Porter, The Rise of Big Business, 1860–1920, 3rd ed. (Wheeling, IL:2006).
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1703773217 10Daniel C. McCallum, “Superintendent’s Report,” March 25, 1856, in AnnualReport of the New York and Erie Railroad Company for 1855 (New York, 1856),pp. 33–37, cited in Alfred Chandler, “The Railroads and the Beginnings of Modern Management,” Harvard Business School Case 377-231 (Boston, 1977;revised May 9, 1995).
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1703773219 11On Carnegie, see Harold C. Livesay, Andrew Carnegie and the Rise of BigBusiness (Boston, 1975); David Nasaw, Andrew Carnegie (New York, 2007).
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1703773221 12Andrew Carnegie, Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie (Garden City, NY: 1933).
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1703773223 13On the Homestead strike, see David Brody, Steelworkers in America: TheNonunion Era (New York, 1960).
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1703773225 14On the role of personal connections and networking, particularly along racial and class lines, in the history of American business, see Pamela Laird, Pull:Networking and Success since Benjamin Franklin (Cambridge, MA: 2006).
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1703773227 15On Rockefeller, see Ron Chernow, Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller(New York, 1998).
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1703773229 16Allan Nevins, John D. Rockefeller (New York, 1959).
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1703773231 17Porter, The Rise of Big Business.
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1703773233 18Louis Galambos and Joseph Pratt, The Rise of the Corporate Commonwealth:U.S. Business and Public Policy in the Twentieth Century (New York, 1988).Dollar conversion from Economic History Association, eh.net.
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1703773235 19Thomas McCraw, “American Capitalism,” in Thomas McCraw, ed., CreatingModern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions (Cambridge, MA: 1997).
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1703773237 20Mihm, Nation of Counterfeiters. On history of monetary policy in the late 19th century, the classic treatment remains Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz,A Monetary History of the United States, 1867–1960 (Princeton, NJ: 1963).For a recent analysis of the creation of the Federal Reserve system, see Peter Conti-Brown, The Power and Independence of the Federal Reserve (Princeton,NJ: 2016).
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1703773239 21Chandler, The Visible Hand.
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