Andrew Popp
Professor
About
Departments
Department of Business Humanities and Law
Room: POR/18.B-2.134
History
USA
United Kingdom
Primary research areas
Business history in Britain and beyond
Business history studies the historical evolution of businesses, industries, and business systems in their full economic, social and cultural contexts. My work has been primarily focused on Britain in the late eighteenth and nineteenth-centuries. However, I sometimes stray towards the United States of America and the twentieth or even twenty-first centuries.
Intimate histories of everyday economic life
In recent years my focus on the history of entrepreneurship and family business has evolved into an interest in exploring the relationship between business history and the histories of emotions and the everyday. I think of this as doing intimate histories of everyday economic life.
My research helps us to understand today through better understanding of the past.
My research helps develop historical awareness. Thinking historically – being knowledgeable about and conscious of the past – helps us better understand current challenges, preparing us to find solutions. History does not simply provide convenient blueprints. Instead, with its emphasis on context, it helps us better grasp complexity and the problems and challenges of human action. History, with its focus on time, also helps us better understand dynamics and processes of change.
Publications
See all publicationsRecent research projects
An intellectual biography of Josiah Wedgwood
Josiah Wedgwood is one of the most famed and illustrious entrepreneurs connected to the first Industrial Revolution that took place in Britain in the eighteenth-century. He has been written about extensively and authors have often drawn on his copious correspondence. However, there is no work dedicated to the intellectual biography of this very important thinker. This project explores the contemporary currents that fed into Wedgwood’s thinking, the intellectual contributions that he himself made, and – most importantly – how thought and action were linked and expressed through his entpreneurial endeavours
The economic lives of Florence and Ray
In contrast to Josiah Wedgwood, Florence and Ray Miller were “nobodies,” quietly living out their lives in eastern Ohio across the first eight decades of the twentieth-century. This project, again based on correspondence, traces out the lives Florence and Ray built together in the context of American capitalism.
Links
LinkedIn
You can find my profile on LinkedIn, but you will also see that I am not very active there.
LinkedIn
Enterprise and Society
I am Editor-in-Chief of “Enterprise and Society: The International Journal of Business History”.
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