Person: Gordon, Andrew
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Publication Like Bamboo Shoots after the Rain
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2011) Gordon, AndrewPublication Consumption, Consumerism, and Japanese Modernity
(Oxford University Press, 2012) Gordon, AndrewPublication Like Bamboo Shoots After the Rain: The Growth of a Nation of Dressmakers and Consumers
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) Gordon, AndrewPublication Credit in a Nation of Savers: The Growth of Consumer Borrowing in Japan
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) Gordon, AndrewPublication E. P. Thompson, Politics and History: Writing Social History Fifty Years after The Making of the English Working Class
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2015) Batzell, Rudi; Beckert, Sven; Gordon, Andrew; Winant, GabrielPublication Making Sense of the lost decades: Workplaces and schools, men and women, young and old, rich and poor
(Routledge, 2015) Gordon, AndrewPublication Reply to J. Mark Ramseyer, "Contracting for Sex in the Pacific War: A Response to My Critics"
(2022-01-25) Gordon, Andrew; Eckert, CarterA reply to an article by Mark Ramseyer that rebuts our earlier criticism of his article "Contracting For Sex in the Pacific War." That article was published in March 2021 in the International Review of Law and Economics, though is currently under consideration for retraction.
Publication Selling the American Way: The Singer Sales System in Japan, 1900-1938
(Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, 2009) Gordon, AndrewFrom 1900 through the 1920s, Singer put in place its proven selling system in Japan, despite making remarkably little adjustment to local conditions, and with a fair degree of success. But the company was hurt in the long run, with a turning point in the early- to mid-1930s, by its refusal to adapt—as its local competitors did—to the expectations of employees and the limited means of potential customers. Singer’s dramatic rise and fall in Japan reveals ways in which practices of global capitalism are simultaneously transformed and transformative as they take root in particular locales.
Publication Statement by Andrew Gordon and Carter Eckert concerning J. Mark Ramseyer, "Contracting for Sex in the Pacific War"
(2021-02-17) Gordon, Andrew; Eckert, Carter