James Edward Le Rossignol

James Edward Le Rossignol
Born (1866-10-24)24 October 1866
Died 4 December 1959(1959-12-04) (aged 93)
Nationality Canadian, American
Occupation Economist, author

James Edward Le Rossignol (24 October 1866 – 4 December 1959) was a Canadian-born American professor of economics with a particular interest in socialism, and also the author of several works of fiction with settings in Quebec.

Life

James Edward Le Rossignol was born on 24 October 1866 in Quebec City, the son of Peter Le Rossignol and Mary (Gillispie) Le Rossignol.[1] He was educated at the Montreal high school and Huntington academy.[2] He went on to McGill University in Montreal, Leipzig University in Germany and Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, earning a B.A.. Ph.D.. and LL.D. In 1898 he married Jessie Katherine Ross.[1]

Le Rossignol was a Professor of Economics at the University of Denver in 1907.[3] He was appointed Professor of Economics at the University of Nebraska in 1911, and Director of the School of Commerce from 1913 to 1919. In 1919 he was appointed Dean of the College of Business Administration.[4] He wrote works on economics as well as several books of short stories and the novel Jean Baptiste (1915).[5] Le Rossignol died on 4 December 1959.[5]

Writings

Le Rossignol's 1901 Monopolies Past and Present, said to "provide an historical introduction to the study of monopolies for the use of busy men", covered ancient monopolies, gilds, exclusive trading companies, patents, municipal monopolies, railways and capitalistic monopolies. A reviewer said that "it seems to be tolerably well adapted to the needs of the larger constituency for which it was designed."[6] The book was criticized for poor coverage of joint stock undertakings and development of the business corporation. It presented the standard arguments for industrial combinations.[7]

A review of Le Rossignol's 1907 Orthodox Socialism said, "One of our ablest writers on economics here defines broadly the creed of socialism, and points out its weaknesses. Strikes, labor unions, the struggle of mass with class, and the perpetual questions of wages and profit come in for their share of intelligent attention. The book is worth pondering over by every earnest voter".[3] Talking of Karl Marx's theory of value, La Rossignol wrote, "Orthodox socialists are deeply concerned to prove it true, for if it can be shown that all values are created by labor alone, it must surely follow that all should belong to the hand and brain that created them."[8]

Le Rossignol was at the University of Denver when he published his 1910 book on State Socialism in New Zealand, co-authored with William Downie Stewart, Jr., a barrister in Dunedin, New Zealand.[9] A reviewer said the authors had achieved their very laudable aim of showing the "workings of the various social experiments as they are without exaggeration of concealment."[10] The reviewer called the book "an illuminating study of the remarkable series of instructive experiments in socialistic legislation, for which New Zealand has become conspicuous, together with that Australian Commonwealth, which is its nearest neighbour."[11]

Peter Haworth and his wife Bobs Cogill Haworth jointly illustrated Le Rossignol's The Habitant Merchant (1939), a collection of short stories.[12]

Bibliography

Non-fiction

Selected articles

Fiction

References

Citations

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.