----------------- HES POSTING ----------------- Announcement -- Hayek-L Email On-Line Seminar David Laidler on _Fabricating the Keynesian Revolution_ Nov. 20 - Nov. 29, 2000 David Laidler will be hosting a seminar on his book _The Fabrication of the Keynesian Revolution_ between Nov. 20 and Nov. 29 on the Hayek-L email list, on the web at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/hayek-l.html Those who wish to participate in the seminar may subscribe to the Hayek-L email list via the Hayek-L web site, or by sending the message: subscribe Hayek-L yourfirstname yourlastname to: [log in to unmask] Laider's online seminar will begin Monday, Nov. 20 with an informal introduction to the contents & arguments of his book _Fabricating the Keynesian Revolution: Studies of the Inter-war Literature on Money, the Cycle, and Unemployment_. David will then field questions & reply to comments on the contents of his book. The seminar will run thru the next week and a half on the Hayek-L email list, concluding Wednesday, Nov. 29. Laider's book may be purchased from the Cambridge University Press on the web at: http://uk.cambridge.org/economics/catalogue/052164173X/default.htm Information on the Hayek-L email list, along with information on past Hayek-L seminars can be found at the Hayek-L email list home page, on the web at: http://www.hayekcenter.org/hayek-l/hayek-l.html The Hayek-L Home Page will also be including a link to the Amazon (US) web bookstore page on Laider's _Fabricating the Keynesian Revolution_. A link to the Hayek-L Home Page is available at The Friedrich Hayek Scholars Page, on the web at: http://www.hayekcenter.org/friedrichhayek/hayek.html Chapter Contents -- _Fabricating the Keynesian Revolution_ Introduction: 1. An overview Part I. The Wicksellians: 2. Wicksellian origins 3. The macrodynamics of the Stockholm school Part II. The Marshallian Tradition in Britain: 4. Cambridge cycle theory: Lavington, Pigou and Robertson 5. The monetary element in the Cambridge tradition 6. The Treatise on Money and related contributions 7. British discussions of unemployment Part III. American Analysis of Money and the Cycle: 8. American macroeconomics between World War I and the Depression 9. American macroeconomics in the early 1930s Part IV. Keynes, the Classical and IS-LM: 10. The General Theory 11. The classics and Mr. Keynes 12. IS-LM and the General Theory 13. Selective synthesis; References. David Laidler is Professor of Economics at the University of Western Ontario. Laidler is the author of a number of books in the theory & history of monetary economics, including _The Demand for Money_, _Taking Money Seriously_, and _The Golden Age of the Quantity Theory_. Laidler's email address is: [log in to unmask] If you have any questions about the Laidler seminar or the Hayek-L email list, please send a message directly to: [log in to unmask] Greg Ransom Hayek-L list host [log in to unmask] ------------ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ------------ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]