Reading the Market: Genres of Financial Capitalism in Gilded Age America

Reading the Market: Genres of Financial Capitalism in Gilded Age America

by Peter Knight
Reading the Market: Genres of Financial Capitalism in Gilded Age America

Reading the Market: Genres of Financial Capitalism in Gilded Age America

by Peter Knight

eBook

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Overview

America’s fascination with the stock market dates back to the Gilded Age.

Winner of the BAAS Book Prize of the British Association of American Studies

Americans pay famously close attention to “the market,” obsessively watching trends, patterns, and swings and looking for clues in every fluctuation. In Reading the Market, Peter Knight explores the Gilded Age origins and development of this peculiar interest. He tracks the historic shift in market operations from local to national while examining how present-day ideas about the nature of markets are tied to past genres of financial representation.

Drawing on the late nineteenth-century explosion of art, literature, and media, which sought to dramatize the workings of the stock market for a wide audience, Knight shows how ordinary Americans became both emotionally and financially invested in the market. He analyzes popular investment manuals, brokers’ newsletters, newspaper columns, magazine articles, illustrations, and cartoons. He also introduces readers to fiction featuring financial tricksters, which was characterized by themes of personal trust and insider information. The book reveals how the popular culture of the period shaped the very idea of the market as a self-regulating mechanism by making the impersonal abstractions of high finance personal and concrete.

From the rise of ticker-tape technology to the development of conspiracy theories, Reading the Market argues that commentary on the Stock Exchange between 1870 and 1915 changed how Americans understood finance—and explains what our pervasive interest in Wall Street says about us now.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421420615
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 09/01/2016
Series: New Studies in American Intellectual and Cultural History
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 11 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Peter Knight is a professor of American studies at the University of Manchester. He is the author of Conspiracy Culture: From Kennedy to The X Files and The Kennedy Assassination and the coeditor of Show Me the Money: The Image of Finance, 1700 to the Present.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Mind the Gap—Why Reputational Risk Matters
Chapter 1: A Reputational Risk Framework
Chapter 2: A Reputational Risk Framework
Chapter 3: Effective Crisis Management Part 1: Getting Ahead of a Crisis
Chapter 4: Effective Crisis Management Part 2: Defining Roles And Responsibilities
Chapter 5: Effective Crisis Management Part 3: From Chaos to Managed Process
Chapter 6: Crisis Communications
Chapter 7: Redefining Issues Management
Chapter 8: The Role of Leadership In Crisis
Chapter 9: Frameworks and Models to Manage Reputational Risk

What People are Saying About This

Jonathan Levy

Compelling, subtle, and deft, Reading the Market is at its best when it applies careful literary analysis to new financial genres. An essential contribution to the cultural history of capitalism, the social studies of finance, and Gilded Age and Progressive Era historiography.

From the Publisher

Compelling, subtle, and deft, Reading the Market is at its best when it applies careful literary analysis to new financial genres. An essential contribution to the cultural history of capitalism, the social studies of finance, and Gilded Age and Progressive Era historiography.
—Jonathan Levy, University of Chicago, author of Freaks of Fortune: The Emerging World of Capitalism and Risk in America

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