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    Karl Paul Polanyi (October 21, 1886 - Pickering, Ontario April 23, 1964) was a Hungarian intellectual known for his opposition to traditional economic thought and his influential book The Great Transformation.

        Karl Polanyi
                Early life
                In the United States
            Legacy
            Works

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    Early life
    Karl Polanyi, brother of chemist and philosopher Michael Polanyi, was born in Vienna, at the time the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The son of a prominent member of bourgeoisie involved in railroads, Polanyi was well educated despite the ups and downs of his father's fortune, and he immersed himself in Budapest's active intellectual and artistic scene. Polanyi founded the radical and influential Galilei Circle while at the University of Budapest. During this time, he was actively engaged with other notable thinkers, such as Georg Lukács, Oscar Jászi, and Karl Mannheim. Polanyi earned his Ph.D. in Philosophy in 1908 and graduated in Law in 1912. In 1914 he helped found the Hungarian Radical Party and served as its secretary.

    Polanyi was a cavalry officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army in World War I, but was removed from service due to disabilities after arriving at the Russian Front. After the war, he returned to Budapest where he became politically active once again. Polanyi supported the Republican government of Mihály Károlyi and its Social Democratic regime. The republic was short-lived, however, and when Béla Kun toppled the Karolyi government to create the Hungarian Soviet Republic Polanyi was forced to flee to Vienna. There he worked as a journalist writing economic and political commentary for (among others) the prestiguous Der Oesterreichische Volkswirt. It was at this time that he first began criticizing the Austrian School of economists, who he felt created abstract models which lost sight of the concrete reality of economic processes. Polanyi himself was attracted to Fabianism and the works of G. D. H. Cole. It was also during this period that Polanyi grew interested in Christian Socialism.

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    In the United States
    He fled Austria in 1933 as the short-lived Austrian Republic began to collapse and fascist influence began to grow. He moved to London, where he earned a living working as a journalist and tutor and took up a position as a lecuturer for the Workers' Educational Association. Polanyi also conducted the bulk of his research for what would later become The Great Transformation. He would not start writing this work until 1940, however, when he moved to Vermont to take up a position at Bennington College. It was published in 1944 to great acclaim. In it, Polanyi described the inclosure process in England and the creation of the contemporary economic system at the beginning of the 19th century.

    After the war Polanyi received a teaching position at Columbia University. However, his wife's background as a former communist made gaining an entrance visa in the United States impossible. As a result they moved to Canada, and Polanyi commuted to New York City. In the early 1950s Polanyi received a large grant from the Ford Foundation to study the economic systems of ancient empires. Having described the emergence of the modern economic system, Polanyi now sought to understand how "the economy" emerged as a distinct sphere in the distant past. His seminar in Columbia drew several famous scholars and influenced a generation of teachers, eventuating in the 1957 volume Trade and Market in the Early Empires. Polanyi continued to write in his later years and established a new journal entitled Coexistence. He died in 1964.

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    Legacy
    Polanyi is remembered today as the originator of a substantivist approach to economics, which emphasized the way economies are embedded in society and culture. This worked against mainstream economics but was popular in anthropology and political science. His book The Great Transformation also became a model for historical sociology.

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    Works
      Trade and Markets in the Early Empires (1957, edited and with contributions by others)
      Primitive, Archaic, and Modern Economics: Essays of Karl Polanyi (1968, collected essays and selections from his work).
     
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