While more on the relationship between the 17th C Dutch tulip bubble
and social perceptions generally than on economic thought
specifically, Anne Goldgar's _Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge
in the Dutch Golden Age_ (U. of Chicago Press, 2007) comes to mind in
response to David Colander's query.
Also, Mary Poovey's recent book, _Genres of the Credit Economy_ (U.
of Chicago Press, 2008) which provides the perspective of a
post-modern literary critic on the interaction between financial
crises and economic thinking in 18th and 19th C Britain.
David Mitch