000 | 01427nam a22002417a 4500 | ||
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003 | ZW-GwMSU | ||
005 | 20231002171848.0 | ||
008 | 231002b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
040 |
_aMSU _cMSU _erda |
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100 | _aURTON, Gary | ||
245 |
_aSin, Confession, and the Arts of Book- and Cord-Keeping _bAn Intercontinental and Transcultural Exploration of Accounting and Governmentality |
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264 |
_aCambridge _bCambridge University Press _c2009 |
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336 |
_2rdacontent _atext _btxt |
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337 |
_2rdamedia _aunmediated _bn |
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338 |
_2rdacarrier _avolume _bnc |
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440 |
_aComparative Studies in Society and History _vVolume , number , |
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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 |
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999 |
_c163394 _d163394 |