Adam Tooze is an economic historian. I've read his Wages of Destruction, a meticulously demystifying account of economic development in Nazi Germany from 1933 until its collapse at the end of World War 2. Tooze also puts out a newsletter, Chartbook, that I can't keep up with, nor will I pretend I entirely understand, but, nonetheless, serves up super curious economic history odds and ends now and then like this one: 

The axial years in modern economics

Add also Joan Robinson, An Essay on Marxian Economics (1943).

A little social media reading list on the "Axial Age" of modern economics. Shouldn't be missed by students of political economic history:  

Chartbook, Adam Tooze

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