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"The Elephant in the Room"
(Sarah Lawrence, Spring 2005)
Frank Roosevelt, a member of the Sarah Lawrence economics
faculty since 1977, likens his field to the elephant a group of blind
scholars famously tried to describe. Each felt a different part of the
animal, and so described a different beast.
“There is no objective truth in economics,” says
Roosevelt. “Nobody understands the whole picture. Everybody gets
a piece of it.”
In February, Oxford University Press published the third edition of the introductory economics textbook Understanding Capitalism: Competition, Command, and Change,
Roosevelt’s six-and-a-half-year project of rewriting and
revision. It’s an untraditional book. Roosevelt is an
untraditional economist.
“I’m not like ninety-nine percent of economists in
the world – I’m in the one percent that is self-styled
‘radical,’” he says. “‘Alternative’
is a more sanitized word.”
Each year, about a million college students take introductory
economics courses; their textbooks are selected from among some two
dozen on the market. But this apparent magnitude of choices, Roosevelt
says, belies the sameness in their explanation of economics.
“Class,” for example, is not an independent entry in the
index of the most popular traditional textbook. “In our
book,” says Roosevelt, “class is not only in the index, but
it has more references to it than almost any other word.
“There are power groups, power interests, and much of
the world is made up of power relationships. Class is about power
relations. We think introductory courses should educate people about
the economic system in which we live. This concept is central to this
book, and that’s what makes it different.”
As a student in the 60’s, Roosevelt was involved in the
Civil Rights and anti-war movements, and co-founded a group called the
Union for Radical Political Economics. The first edition of Understanding Capitalism (1985)
was written by two friends from the Union’s early days, Samuel
Bowles and Richard Edwards. Roosevelt began using it right away, giving
it equal course time with more traditional textbooks and introducing,
he concedes, “a lot of cognitive dissonance” into his
classes.
“The greatest benefit is if teachers are willing to
present different interpretations or points of view. Students figure
out for themselves what they want to take away; they put together their
own understanding of the economy.”
In the late 1990s Understanding Capitalism went out
of print and became unavailable. “I called Sam [Bowles] and said,
‘Sam, I need another edition. I can’t teach without this
book.’ He threw it back at me and said, ‘Frank, you do
it.’ I said, ‘Oh… let me think about
that.’”
But Roosevelt took it on. “I rewrote nearly every
paragraph in the book. It took over my life. I gave up everything I
could reasonably give up, except eating, sleeping and some sort of
family life. It became my top priority.”
He persuaded Bowles, one of the world’s foremost
economists, to submit new text, while a former student, Jillian Porter
’02, read drafts and offered editorial criticism.
“I’d get back something twice as long with her
comments,” Roosevelt says.
The third edition of Understanding Capitalism is a
“much fuller book,” he believes, as well as less
confrontational and overtly Marxist. Where earlier editions used terms
like “capitalist” and “worker,” the new edition
replaces them with “employer” and “employee.”
Roosevelt will use it in class this fall.
Economists of all stripes have lighter sides, too, even deep
into a labor of love: Among the things Roosevelt didn’t give up
during the revision of Understanding Capitalism was his
barbershop quartet, where he sings baritone with three friends. Last
winter they celebrated 20 years together in straw hats.
-- James Bourne
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