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7. Criticism in History and Economic History

[51] “The New Economic History: An Introduction,” Revista Storica Italiana (Mar, 1971: 5-22; in Italian); and Revista Espanola de Economia  (May-Aug 1971) in Spanish).
 
[124] “Introduction” to special issue of Explorations in Economic History 11 (Summer, 1974): 317-324.
 
[125] “The New Economic History in Britain” (in Italian), Quaderni Storici 31 (Dec 1976): 401-08.
 
[52] " Does the Past Have Useful Economics?”  Journal of Economic Literature 14 (June 1976): 434-61.  Translated into Russian for Thesis 1 (1, Spring 1993): 107-136.  Reprinted in Diana Betts and Robert Whaples, eds. Readings in American Economic History, 1994.
 
[53]  “The Achievements of the Cliometric School,”  Journal of Economic History 38 (1, Mar, 1978): 13-28.
 
[54] " The Problem of Audience in Historical Economics: Rhetorical Thoughts on a Text by Robert Fogel,”  History and Theory  24 (1, 1985): 1-22.
 
[117] “Review of Boland's The Foundations of Economic Method,” Journal of Economic Literature 23 (June 1985): 618-19.
 
[ 55] [with Allan Megill]  “The Rhetoric of History.”  Pp. 221-238 in Nelson, Megill, and McCloskey, eds.  The Rhetoric of the Human Sciences (University of Wisconsin Press, 1987).
 
[56]  “Counterfactuals,” article in Eatwell, Milgate, and Newman, eds.  The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economic Thought and Doctrine (Macmillan, 1987).
 
[57] " Continuity in Economic History,” article in The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economic Thought and Doctrine (Macmillan, 1987), pp. 623-626.
 
[58] “The Storied Character of Economics,” Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis 101 (4, 1988): 543-654.
 
[59] “Reply to Professor Klein.” same 102 (1989): 66-67.
 
[60] “History, Differential Equations, and the Problem of Narration,”  History and Theory  30 (1, 1991): 21-36.
 
 
[61] “Ancients and Moderns” [presidential address, Social Science History Association, Washington, D.C., 1989].  Social Science History, 14 (3, Jan 1991): 289-303.
 
[146] “Introduction” to McCloskey and Hersh, eds. A Bibliography of Historical Economics to 1980, Cambridge University Press, 1991, pp. ix-xii.
 
[62] ”Kinks, Tools, Spurts, and Substitutes: Gerschenkron’s Rhetoric of Relative Backwardness,” Chapter 6 in Richard Sylla and Gianni Toniolo, eds. Patterns of European Industrialization: The Nineteenth Century (London: Routledge, 1991).
 
[154] “Looking Forward into History.”  Introduction (pp. 3-10) to McCloskey, ed., Second Thoughts: Myths and Morals of U.S. Economic History  (Oxford, 1992).
 
[92] “The Economics of Choice: Neoclassical Supply and Demand.”  in Thomas Rawski, ed., Economics and the Historian  (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1995): 122-158
 
[192] “1066 and a Wave of Gadgets: The Achievements of British Growth,” in Penelope Gouk, ed., Wellsprings of Achievement: Cultural and Economic Dynamics in Early Modern England and Japan (Variorum, 1995).
 
[187] {[with Santhi Hejeebu] “The Reproving of Karl Polanyi,” forthcoming 2001 Critical Review, 30 pp..}