Tuesday, September 10, 2013 - 12:30pm to Wednesday, September 11, 2013 - 1:55pm
Location: 
Solarium-Falconer Hall, 84 Queen's Park

CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF LAW WORKSHOP

presents

Professor Roy Kreitner
Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law

The Political Career of the Dollar, 1862-1913

Tuesday, September 10, 2013
12:30 - 2:00
Falconer Hall, Solarium (Room FA2)
84 Queen's Park

In the last third of the nineteenth century, the nature of American money was a searing political issue, deciding elections, creating and breaking up political parties, mobilizing masses. Often, and especially in the years leading up to the election of 1896, it was the political issue. But then, almost suddenly, money fell off the political table. By 1913 when the Federal Reserve Act established a modern, independent central bank and realigned the monetary system, money had become bipartisan; contention over money had, in fact, morphed into polite discussion of banking reform. Historians of various stripes agree widely that the money question fell from prominence after the presidential election of 1896. There is no agreement, however, on how the dominant dispute in popular politics lost its force as a mobilizing issue. More importantly, there is precious little accounting for the implications of the change for American political economy more generally.  The Political Career of the Dollar sets out to answer the question of how money could go from central stage and fever pitch to non-partisan technocratic reform within a generation, and to explore the meaning of such a shift not only for money, but for the shape of American capitalism writ large. In moving the discussion of money from popular politics to a rarefied realm of expertise, much more than monetary policy was at stake. Shifting monetary politics transformed the role of law, and with it conceptions of democracy and self-government. Money did not become non-political. Instead, it transformed politics to establish the sovereignty of the economic. 
 
Roy Kreitner teaches in the fields of private law, legal history, and law and political thought at the Faculty of Law at Tel Aviv University. He is the author of Calculating Promises: The Emergence of Modern American Contract Doctrine (Stanford University Press, 2007).  In 2009-10 he was a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute at Harvard University and an ACLS Fellow, and in 2010-11 he was a visiting researcher at the Institute for Global Law and Policy at Harvard Law School.  He is currently working on a book on the history of money in the U.S. from the Civil War until World War I.

A light lunch will be served.

 
For more information about this workshop, please contact Nadia Gulezko at n.gulezko@utoronto.ca.