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University of North Carolina Press
Panic!: Markets, Crises, and Crowds in American Fiction
Panic!: Markets, Crises, and Crowds in American Fiction
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During the economic depression of the 1890s and the speculative frenzy of the following decade, Wall Street, high finance, and market crises assumed unprecedented visibility in the United States. Fiction writers published scores of novels in the period that explored this new cultural phenomenon. In Panic , David A. Zimmerman studies how American novelists and their readers imagined--and in one case, incited--market crashes and financial panics.
Panic examines how Americans' attitudes toward securities markets, popular investment, and financial catastrophe were entangled with their conceptions of gender, class, crowds, corporations, and history. Zimmerman investigates how writers turned to mob psychology, psychic investigations, and conspiracy discourse to understand not only how financial markets worked, but also how mass acts of financial reading, including novel reading, could trigger economic disaster and cultural chaos. In addition, Zimmerman shows how, by concentrating on markets in crisis, novelists were able to explore the limits of fiction's aesthetic, economic, and ethical capacities. With readings of canonical as well as lesser-known novelists, Zimmerman provides an original and wide-ranging analysis of the relation between fiction and financial modernity.
Author: David a. Zimmerman
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Published: 05/29/2006
Pages: 312
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.84lbs
Size: 8.42h x 5.90w x 0.76d
ISBN: 9780807856871
Panic examines how Americans' attitudes toward securities markets, popular investment, and financial catastrophe were entangled with their conceptions of gender, class, crowds, corporations, and history. Zimmerman investigates how writers turned to mob psychology, psychic investigations, and conspiracy discourse to understand not only how financial markets worked, but also how mass acts of financial reading, including novel reading, could trigger economic disaster and cultural chaos. In addition, Zimmerman shows how, by concentrating on markets in crisis, novelists were able to explore the limits of fiction's aesthetic, economic, and ethical capacities. With readings of canonical as well as lesser-known novelists, Zimmerman provides an original and wide-ranging analysis of the relation between fiction and financial modernity.
Author: David a. Zimmerman
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Published: 05/29/2006
Pages: 312
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.84lbs
Size: 8.42h x 5.90w x 0.76d
ISBN: 9780807856871
About the Author
David A. Zimmerman is associate professor of English at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
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