Types of calling and virtue, country to industrial calling, factory life and being called to supper calling, a farm to table calling, and a call of national security. Here types of virtue are discussed and how they are used in the text.
Author: crhubb296b1fb348
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Historical Development
Historical Development of Marxism and American Thought. Marxism and American democratic thought develop as responses to material and institutional changes, emphasizing ideas inseparable from economic and social conditions
An Institutional-Economics-Focused Reading of “Working-Class Calling”
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Historical Fiction
Fischer by contrast, uses Waverley as a reference point to show how much more Scott achieves in Heart of Midlothian once he finds a character whose fusion is complex enough to bear both ethical and aesthetic weight.
Historical Fiction and Oppositional Discourse
Scott and Lukács Popular Front -
Symphony of Power / PERSIA
Notice how the PERSIA framework organizes a left to right civilizational analysis into six interlocking domains. Political, Economic, Religious, Social, Intellectual, and Area/Geography. Where Intelligence and Religion influence Political/Social domain indicators of Centralized Government and Mass Society which may be evidenced by who populates the accounts today of Japan’s Keidanren USA.
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Video: Friedrich Engels Museum
FRIEDRICH ENGELS MUSEUM, The family firm Ermen & Engels operated Victoria Mills in Greater Manchester. From 1842 to 1844 Engels worked there and began gathering observations for his book: The Condition of the Working Class in England. The factory produced cotton sewing threads.
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Video: The Dutch In Japan
The Dutch Opening Markets in The Edo Period 1633-1868 with the Tokugawa Shogunate.
The Spirit of Modernity: Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic and Japanese Social Sciences.
Schweitzer, Wolfgang.
Tokugawa Religion: The Cultural Roots of Modern Japan.
Bellah, Robert N. -
Literature Review

In this review, we argue from Sir Walter Scott’s historical fiction onward, literary representations of the traditional working class authorize claims about work, class, and historical development through a dual mechanism of moral urgency – the ethical imperative to address epochal suffering – and warrant claims – the text’s formal strategies that legitimize those imperatives as historically necessary.Warranting the Working Class: Moral Urgency and Historical Authorization from Scott to Mann.
With an annotated bibliography, I map primary texts chronology showing how authors like Scott, Engels, Dickens, Veblen, Polanyi, and Thomas Mann refine an authorizing logic amid industrial capitalism’s unfolding crisis.