Paul Nystrom

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Paul Henry Nystrom (January 25, 1878 - August 1969)[1] was a professor of marketing at Columbia University.

Paul Henry Nystrom retired from Columbia in 1950. Paul Nystrom is frequently associated with the philosophy of futility, a phrase which he coined in his 1928 book Economics of Fashion to describe the disposition caused by the monotony of the new industrial age.[2][3][4]

Bibliography

  • Retail Selling and Store Management (1914, 1916, 1919)[5]
  • The Economics of Retailing (1915, 1930)
  • Textiles (1916)
  • Retail Store Management (1917, 1922)
  • Economics of Fashion (1928)
  • Economic Principles of Consumption (1929, 1931)
  • Fashion Merchandising (1932)
  • Retail Institutions and Trends (1932)
  • Trends Dangerous to Consumers Under the NRA (1935)
  • Retail Store Operation (1946)
  • Marketing Handbook (1951)
  • Automobile Selling (unknown)

See also

References

  1. Princeton University Library's Manuscripts Division. Paul Nystrom Manuscripts
  2. Social Security Death Index (Social Security Administration)
  3. Economics of Fashion. Paul Nystrom, The Ronald Press Company p68. (1928).
  4. The Journal of Marketing, Volume XXI, No.4 (April, 1957)
  5. "Scientific selling". The Independent. Nov 30, 1914. Retrieved July 24, 2012. 

External links


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