Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850

<p>The financial crisis of 2008 has been the most significant global economic phenomenon of the new century. Sudden and largely unanticipated, this crisis nonetheless marks the latest in a series of financial panics that forms a welldocumented feature of finance capitalism stretching back to t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hartley, C
Other Authors: Small, H
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
_version_ 1826304307875545088
author Hartley, C
author2 Small, H
author_facet Small, H
Hartley, C
author_sort Hartley, C
collection OXFORD
description <p>The financial crisis of 2008 has been the most significant global economic phenomenon of the new century. Sudden and largely unanticipated, this crisis nonetheless marks the latest in a series of financial panics that forms a welldocumented feature of finance capitalism stretching back to the Dutch Tulip Bubble of 1637 and beyond, including such notorious crises as the South Sea Bubble of 1720, the Railway Shares panics of 1837 and 1847, the Wall Street Crash of 1929, and Black Monday in 1987. These and other crises have fostered a complex and diverse intellectual response - particularly since the South Sea Bubble - that has included interventions not only from economists and economic historians, but poets, dramatists, novelists, and others. This raises the question of whether the novel’s contribution to our wider understanding of financial crises has been fully acknowledged and assessed. In this thesis, the complex and shifting relationship between literary and non-literary responses to financial crisis is explored through an examination of the ideas of political economists, philosophers, journalists, financiers, and others, including Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Lord Overstone, Walter Bagehot, Herbert Spencer, Thorstein Veblen, Joseph Schumpeter, and J.M. Keynes, that situates their theories alongside readings of novels of financial crisis from the 1850s onward...</p> <p>Abstract truncated for record page display</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:15:50Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:f10d11fd-916d-480f-ac24-0379b1a5a71b
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:15:50Z
publishDate 2015
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f10d11fd-916d-480f-ac24-0379b1a5a71b2022-03-27T11:52:57ZFear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:f10d11fd-916d-480f-ac24-0379b1a5a71bEnglish Language and LiteratureEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2015Hartley, CSmall, HPratt, L<p>The financial crisis of 2008 has been the most significant global economic phenomenon of the new century. Sudden and largely unanticipated, this crisis nonetheless marks the latest in a series of financial panics that forms a welldocumented feature of finance capitalism stretching back to the Dutch Tulip Bubble of 1637 and beyond, including such notorious crises as the South Sea Bubble of 1720, the Railway Shares panics of 1837 and 1847, the Wall Street Crash of 1929, and Black Monday in 1987. These and other crises have fostered a complex and diverse intellectual response - particularly since the South Sea Bubble - that has included interventions not only from economists and economic historians, but poets, dramatists, novelists, and others. This raises the question of whether the novel’s contribution to our wider understanding of financial crises has been fully acknowledged and assessed. In this thesis, the complex and shifting relationship between literary and non-literary responses to financial crisis is explored through an examination of the ideas of political economists, philosophers, journalists, financiers, and others, including Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Lord Overstone, Walter Bagehot, Herbert Spencer, Thorstein Veblen, Joseph Schumpeter, and J.M. Keynes, that situates their theories alongside readings of novels of financial crisis from the 1850s onward...</p> <p>Abstract truncated for record page display</p>
spellingShingle English Language and Literature
Hartley, C
Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850
title Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850
title_full Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850
title_fullStr Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850
title_full_unstemmed Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850
title_short Fear and greed: financial crisis in the novel since 1850
title_sort fear and greed financial crisis in the novel since 1850
topic English Language and Literature
work_keys_str_mv AT hartleyc fearandgreedfinancialcrisisinthenovelsince1850