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040 _aMSU
_cMSU
_erda
100 _aURTON, Gary
245 _aSin, Confession, and the Arts of Book- and Cord-Keeping
_bAn Intercontinental and Transcultural Exploration of Accounting and Governmentality
264 _aCambridge
_bCambridge University Press
_c2009
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
_btxt
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
_bn
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
_bnc
440 _aComparative Studies in Society and History
_vVolume , number ,
520 _aMy objective is to examine an intriguing and heretofore unrecognized convergence in the history of bookkeeping. The story revolves around an extraordinary parallelism in the evolution of bookkeeping and the philosophical and ethical principles underlying the practice of accounting between southern Europe and Andean South America during the two centuries or so prior to the Spanish invasion of the Inka Empire in 1532. The event of the European invasion of the Andes brought these two similar yet distinct trans-Atlantic traditions of “bookkeeping” and accounting into violent confrontation.
650 _aaccounting
650 _agovernmentality
650 _atranscultural exploration
856 _u https://doi.org/10.1017/S0010417509990144
942 _2lcc
_cJA
999 _c163394
_d163394