
The Puritan Gift
Reclaiming the American Dream Amidst Global Financial Chaos
I.B. Tauris (Publisher)
Published on 23. February 2007
Book
Hardback
352 pages
978-1-85043-419-1 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
Where does the Protestant work ethic come from? And how did America achieve such dominance in management for so long? "The Puritan Gift" traces the origins and the characteristics of American managerial culture which, in the course of three centuries, turned a group of small colonies into the greatest economic and political power on earth. "The Puritan Gift" argues that the drive, energy and acceptance of innovation, competition, growth and social mobility, all of which lie at the root of America's management culture, have their origins in the discipline and ethos of America's first wave of European immigrants: the Puritans. And, the authors warn, as Americans distance themselves from the core values which produced their business and economic successes during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, they put their future prosperity and security at risk. This is an original exploration of the dramatic and far-reaching consequences of the Puritans' 'gift' to America - the ethos which produced the early success of America and what came to be known as the American dream. Puritan Gift has been chosen as one of the top 10 business books of 2007 by the Financial Times
Reviews / Votes
'A challenging, well-informed and powerfully-written book...It will have a long shelf-life' Norman Stone, formerly Professor of Modern History at Oxford University and author of Europe Transformed and The Eastern Front 'I am tremendously interested in what you write and impressed by it' Peter F. Drucker, bestselling author of The Practice of Management and America's foremost writer about management 'I would insist that every person enrolled in the study of technology should be required to read The Puritan Gift before reading any other managerment book...A goldmine of information' Myron Tribus, former Director of Advanced Engineering Study, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'Very interesting, a fun read and a store of eye-opening anecdotes' Robert Chote, Director of the Institute for Fiscal StudiesAn excellent new book.-William Rees-MoggFINANCIAL TIMES' The best thing about The Puritan Gift is that it is a real book, full of fascinating insights, intellectual rigour and challenging, authoritative arguments that remind us that there is nothing new about the responsibilities of management.'- Richard DonkinMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Illustrations
15 integrated bw
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-85043-419-1 (9781850434191)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Kenneth Hopper | William Hopper
The Puritan Gift
Reclaiming the American Dream Amidst Global Financial Chaos
Book
09/2009
I.B. Tauris
€52.18
Shipment within 3-4 weeks
Persons
Ken Hopper has been active throughout his professional life as a writer on industrial affairs and a consultant in both the U.S. and Europe. He was born in Scotland and is now a U.S. citizen living in New Jersey. Will Hopper (his brother) lives in London and has spent his career in investment banking in New York and London. Their combined knowledge of manufacturing and finance gives this book its unique depth and perspective.
Content
THE PURITAN GIFT
CONSOLIDATED LIST OF CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS (as of 08/10/08)
Page Lines from top Changes
DEDICATION PAGE
v add the following poem towards the centre of the page:
One ship sails East and another West,
By the self-same winds that blow.
'Tis the set of the sails, and not the gales,
That tells the way we go.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Poems of Progress. 1911.>First Light of the True Dawn? >>
Do the same to the chapter heading on page 262 and to the page headings on pages 265, 267, 269, 271, 273, 275 & 277
PREFACE
xi 10 Italicise: >>Ecole Polytechnique>>
12 after >>France.>> add: >>Anderson's College is now the
University of Strathclyde.>>
15 replace: >>Systematic Organic Chemistry (1937),>> with: >>Systematic
Organic Chemistry: Modern Methods of Preparation and Estimation (1923, 1931, 1937, 1950), >>
33 add: >>to>> in front of: >>a Japan>>
37 add period after: >>.com.>>
xii 15 replace >>special>> with: >>specialist>>
37 insert >>(sic)>> after: >>technical>>
24 replace >>(see page 114)>> with: >>(see pages 114 and 115)>>
: 27 add >>the late>> in front of: >>George>>
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
xiv 05 insert >>Electronic>> in front of >>Network>>Mark Tully,>> add >>Roger Schenke, Executive Vice
President, the American College of Physician Executives; Professor
Peter Kawalek, Manchester Business School; David Howard,
Management-NewStyle Limited >>
12 replace >>Brinkman>> with: >>Brinkmann>>
14 replace >>Kenneth>> with: >>Kenton>>
15 omit >>David Howard>>
18 replace >>, as well as>> with: >> ; >>
20 insert comma after >>Jersey>>
20 replace >>as well as>> with >>and>>
17 add >>Gerald Shalet>> before >>Martin Shelley>>
17 add >>Anthony Tylecote,>> after >>Martin Shelly,>>
NOTE TO EDITOR: PLEASE ENSURE THAT NAMES IN THE SECOND PARA ON THIS PAGE ARE IN STRICT ALPHABETICAL ORDER BY SURNAME
PROLOGUE
xvi 19 replace >>in June 2006>> with >>in BusinessWeek in 2006>> [note:
BusinessWeek is one word.]
PART I: ORIGINS
(no changes)
CHAPTER 1
03 epigraph Zeale is but a wilde-fire without knowledge.
Rev. John Cotton. Boston, Massachusetts. 1651.
04 add >>of the United States>> after: >>most citizens>>
10/11 remove >>intimately>> [word appears twice in para]
06 04/06 substitute: >>An anonymous source tells us that etc>> for: >>Captain Staughton...to England that etc>>
31 replace >>would do>> with >>did>>
10 04 replace >>expression>> with >>exposition>> [misquotation]
12 09 insert >>in mid-July:>> after >>Thames>>
13 03 Insert before >>For a century and a half...>> the following para:
>>
The settlers of the 1630s had modeled themselves on the people of the Old Testament, the Puritan values and practices which Tawney described so vividly being largely Jewish in inspiration. It is therefore not surprising that, when first German and then Russian Jews moved in large numbers to the New World in the nineteenth century, they should have found the established American mores to their liking and become successful in business. In so doing, the newcomers both perpetuated and enhanced the great tradition of good management inherited from the first settlers. (Interestingly, the prophet Mani is said to have formed his religious outlook while dwelling in an ascetic Jew
CONSOLIDATED LIST OF CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS (as of 08/10/08)
Page Lines from top Changes
DEDICATION PAGE
v add the following poem towards the centre of the page:
One ship sails East and another West,
By the self-same winds that blow.
'Tis the set of the sails, and not the gales,
That tells the way we go.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Poems of Progress. 1911.>First Light of the True Dawn? >>
Do the same to the chapter heading on page 262 and to the page headings on pages 265, 267, 269, 271, 273, 275 & 277
PREFACE
xi 10 Italicise: >>Ecole Polytechnique>>
12 after >>France.>> add: >>Anderson's College is now the
University of Strathclyde.>>
15 replace: >>Systematic Organic Chemistry (1937),>> with: >>Systematic
Organic Chemistry: Modern Methods of Preparation and Estimation (1923, 1931, 1937, 1950), >>
33 add: >>to>> in front of: >>a Japan>>
37 add period after: >>.com.>>
xii 15 replace >>special>> with: >>specialist>>
37 insert >>(sic)>> after: >>technical>>
24 replace >>(see page 114)>> with: >>(see pages 114 and 115)>>
: 27 add >>the late>> in front of: >>George>>
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
xiv 05 insert >>Electronic>> in front of >>Network>>Mark Tully,>> add >>Roger Schenke, Executive Vice
President, the American College of Physician Executives; Professor
Peter Kawalek, Manchester Business School; David Howard,
Management-NewStyle Limited >>
12 replace >>Brinkman>> with: >>Brinkmann>>
14 replace >>Kenneth>> with: >>Kenton>>
15 omit >>David Howard>>
18 replace >>, as well as>> with: >> ; >>
20 insert comma after >>Jersey>>
20 replace >>as well as>> with >>and>>
17 add >>Gerald Shalet>> before >>Martin Shelley>>
17 add >>Anthony Tylecote,>> after >>Martin Shelly,>>
NOTE TO EDITOR: PLEASE ENSURE THAT NAMES IN THE SECOND PARA ON THIS PAGE ARE IN STRICT ALPHABETICAL ORDER BY SURNAME
PROLOGUE
xvi 19 replace >>in June 2006>> with >>in BusinessWeek in 2006>> [note:
BusinessWeek is one word.]
PART I: ORIGINS
(no changes)
CHAPTER 1
03 epigraph Zeale is but a wilde-fire without knowledge.
Rev. John Cotton. Boston, Massachusetts. 1651.
04 add >>of the United States>> after: >>most citizens>>
10/11 remove >>intimately>> [word appears twice in para]
06 04/06 substitute: >>An anonymous source tells us that etc>> for: >>Captain Staughton...to England that etc>>
31 replace >>would do>> with >>did>>
10 04 replace >>expression>> with >>exposition>> [misquotation]
12 09 insert >>in mid-July:>> after >>Thames>>
13 03 Insert before >>For a century and a half...>> the following para:
>>
The settlers of the 1630s had modeled themselves on the people of the Old Testament, the Puritan values and practices which Tawney described so vividly being largely Jewish in inspiration. It is therefore not surprising that, when first German and then Russian Jews moved in large numbers to the New World in the nineteenth century, they should have found the established American mores to their liking and become successful in business. In so doing, the newcomers both perpetuated and enhanced the great tradition of good management inherited from the first settlers. (Interestingly, the prophet Mani is said to have formed his religious outlook while dwelling in an ascetic Jew