References
Adams, Roy D. and Ken McCormick (1992), “Fashion Dynamics and the Economic Theory of Clubs,” Review of Social Economy, 50, 24-39.
Ambrose, Stanley H. (2002), “Small Things Remembered: Origins of Early Microlithic Industries in Sub-Saharan Africa,” in Robert G. Elston and Steven L. Kuhn, Eds., Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithization, American Anthropological Association.
Ambrose, Stanley H. (2005), Private e-mail.
Aristotle (1984), The Complete Works of Aristotle, edited by Johnathan Barnes, Princeton University Press: Princeton.
Aspromourgos, Tony (1986), “On the Origin of the Term ‘Neoclassical’,” Cambridge Journal of Economics, 10, 265-70.
Brette, Olivier (2003), “Thorstein Veblen’s Theory of Institutional Change: Beyond Technological Determinism,” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 10, 455-77.
Buckley, William F. (2005), “Whose Money Is It?” National Review, June 20, 58.
Clark, John Bates (1899/1965), The Distribution of Wealth, Augustus M. Kelley: New York.
Coats, A. W. (1954), “The Influence of Veblen’s Methodology,” Journal of Political Economy, 62, 529-37.
Cox, W. Michael and Koo, Jahyeong (2006) “Miracle to Malaise: What’s Next for Japan? Economic Letter, Vol. 1, No. 1, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Diggins, John P. (1977), “Animism and the Origins of Alienation: The Anthropological Perspective of Thorstein Veblen,” History and Theory, 16, 113-26.
Diggins, John P. (1999), Thorstein Veblen, Theorist of the Leisure Class, Princeton University Press: Princeton.
“Dilbert,” (2005) Waterloo Courier, June 30, C9.
Dorfman, Joseph (1934/1972), Thorstein Veblen and His America, Augustus M. Kelley: Clifton NJ.