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Oxford University Press

Fictions of Finance at the End of an American Century: Punctuating Capital

Fictions of Finance at the End of an American Century: Punctuating Capital

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Fictions of Finance at the End of an American Century explores how an economy determines the language of those who live among its imperatives--and how it makes available to them the stories that they can and cannot tell, and the manner of their telling. Read closely, fictional narrative may expose the historical structures that determine literary language use, and that of language more generally. The study, the fourth in a quartet of studies addressing the emergence and decline of a Fordist regime of capitalist accumulation, offers an account of 'the sub-semantic whispering' that haunts the literature of the financial turn--which is to say, an account of how the complexities of words and their histories register an expanding industrial economy's organizing contradictions and failures. Reading in the light of deindustrialization and the rise of US finance capital after 1973, it deploys and elaborates on a materialist theory of language that explains how syntactic as well as semantic structures register a financializing economy's core contradictions, those associated particularly with debt, risk, and volatility. The volume listens for the under-heard syntactical breaks that punctuate language under the global hegemony of finance, breaks that express the unuttered in all utterance, taking as its exemplary texts primarily works by Bret Easton Ellis, Jayne Anne Phillips, and David Foster Wallace.

Author: Richard Godden
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 10/11/2023
Pages: 290
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.32lbs
Size: 9.29h x 6.46w x 0.92d
ISBN: 9780192867759

About the Author
Richard Godden, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Irvine

Richard Godden is Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Irvine.
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