Description
Book SynopsisMoney Talks explores the ways the financial concepts of money and capital are understood and talked about by a range of people, from traders to ordinary investors, and how these accounts are framed and represented across a range of media. This collection brings together leading writers and emerging researchers to demonstrate how work in media and cultural studies can contribute to debates around the meanings of money, the operations of capital and the nature of the current crisis. Drawing on a range of work from across disciplines, Money Talks offers a provocative and path-breaking demonstration of the value of incorporating approaches from media and cultural studies into an understanding of economic issues.
Table of ContentsFinancial speculations: Contested constructions of markets and crisis Graham Murdock
Part 1: Insider talk Chapter 1: Financial insider talk in the city of London
Aeron Davis Chapter 2: Funny in a rich man’s world: The contradictory conceptions of money in forex trading
Peter A. Thompson Chapter 3: Stating support for the city: Thirty years of budget talk
Catherine Walsh
Part 2: News talk Chapter 4: More of the same: News, economic growth and the recycling of conventional wisdom
Justin Lewis and Richard Thomas Chapter 5: Conflict of interest disclosure in economics: Will journalists aid the cause?
George DeMartino Chapter 6: Trouble in the markets: Differentiation in the Norwegian financial news landscape
Nina Kvalheim and Helle Sjøvaag Chapter 7: Covering the crisis: Politics and culture
Jostein Gripsrud
Part 3: Screen talk Chapter 8: No guns, no rules, just pure capitalism! Hollywood’s portraits of Wall Street
Anja Peltzer Chapter 9: System down! Three documentary accounts of crisis
John Corner
Part 4: Everyday talk Chapter 10: ‘I just hope the whole thing won’t collapse’: ‘Understanding’ and ‘overcoming’ the EU financial crisis from the citizen’s perspective
Andreas Hepp, Swantje Lingenberg, Monika Elsler, Johanna Möller, Anne Mollen and Anke Offerhaus
Afterword: Business as usual and its discontents Graham Murdock