1. Basics
2. Europe Before the Industrial Revolution
3. The European World Economy
4. The Coming of the Industrial Age
5. Globalization
6. Background
Potential Students:
While I admire Greif's work, I thought that Analytical Narratives was quite a weak book. Have you seen Jon Elster's review of it in the September 2000 APSR?
As a sociologist, I'm interested to see what you put on your syllabus or this sort of course, seeing as it overlaps so much with big questions in comparative historical sociology. My own disciplinary biases tend in two directions: (1) Towards some reading that focuses attention on the role of the state --- Chuck Tilly's Coercion, Capital and European States for instance, or Tom Ertman's Birth of the Leviathan. (2) Towards something that emphasizes the birth of the modern corporate form. Bill Roy's Socializing Captial for example, but that's about the U.S.
I thought the Pomeranz book was terrific