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Social Capital
353
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0
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2004
Year
Business HistoryClassical SociologyClass ConflictSociologySocial Foundations Of EducationPolitical PluralismSocial FoundationsConceptual HistoryBackward-revealing Conceptual HistoryEducationCritical TheorySocial Science EducationSocial CapitalPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesSocialism
Taking its departure from current debates over social capital, this article presents new textual findings in a backward-revealing conceptual history. In particular, it analyzes the texts and contexts of Lyda J. Hanifan who was rediscovered by Robert Putnam as having (allegedly first) used the term; it offers discoveries of earlier uses of the term and concept—most notably by John Dewey—thereby introducing critical pragmatism as another tradition of social capital; and it recovers features of the critique of political economy in the nineteenth century—from Bellamy to Marshall to Sidgwick to Marx—that assessed “capital from the social point of view, ” especially cooperative associations. While it ends with Marx’s use of “social capital, ” Dewey is its central figure. The article concludes by returning to the present and offering work, sympathy, civic education, and a critical stance as emergent themes from this conceptual history that might enrich current debates.