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Thorstein
Veblen
1857-1929
PhD
1884
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Economist or satirist?
Academician or iconoclast? The author of The Theory of the Leisure Class,
and coiner of the term "conspicuous consumption," fitted no standard mold. He
bounced around American universities, from Chicago to Stanford, from Missouri
to the New School for Social Research, deprived of advancement by a romantic
scandal here, indifferent teaching there. The one constant was writing.
Veblen's signature
work, published in 1899, was, according to John Kenneth Galbraith, one of
the two books by 19th-century U.S. economists that are still read. Galbraith
called Leisure Class "a wide-ranging and timeless comment on the behavior
of people who possess or are in the pursuit of wealth and who, looking beyond
their wealth, want the eminence that, or so they believe, wealth was meant
to buy."
Economists have
adopted Veblen's view of consumption as a symbolic psychological, as well
as material, drive. Though the work set out to study "the place and value
of the leisure class as an economic factor in modern life," Veblen admits
in the opening sentence that he has gone well beyond the discipline of economics.
In fact his social commentary -- often expressed through Swiftian humor -- provides most of the book's enduring appeal.
The son of Norwegian
immigrants in Wisconsin, Veblen attended Carleton College before obtaining
his doctorate in philosophy from Yale. He helped edit the new Journal of
Political Economy in Chicago and publicly debated the scientific status
of economics. His several published books addressed wide-ranging topics concerning
modern society.
