Paul Nystrom
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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
- ↑ Princeton University Library's Manuscripts Division. Paul Nystrom Manuscripts
- ↑ Social Security Death Index (Social Security Administration)
- ↑ Economics of Fashion. Paul Nystrom, The Ronald Press Company p68. (1928).
- ↑ The Journal of Marketing, Volume XXI, No.4 (April, 1957)
- ↑ "Scientific selling". The Independent. Nov 30, 1914. Retrieved July 24, 2012.
External links
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