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[ecrea] "The Financialized Imagination," TOPIA 30/31 special double issue
Thu Apr 03 06:45:51 GMT 2014
ANNOUNCING “THE FINANCIALIZED IMAGINATION”
TOPIA: CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CULTURAL STUDIES
SPECIAL DOUBLE ISSUE (30–31, Fall 2013 / Winter 2014)
Edited by Jody Berland (York University) and Max Haiven (Nova Scotia
College of Art and Design)
LAUNCH EVENT IN TORONTO: April 12, 5-7pm, The Melody Bar, 1214 Queen St.
West. Free and open to the public. This is a joint launch with Max
Haiven’s new book Crises of Imagination, Crises of Power: Capitalism,
Creativity and the Commons.
Since the financial sector erupted in crisis and plunged the global
economy into turmoil, the cultural dimensions of “financialization” are
becoming clearer. This special double issue of TOPIA: Canadian Journal
of Cultural Studies brings together a wide array of thinkers to explore
the question of “The Financialized Imagination.” How are the cultures of
financial accumulation produced in the secretive corridors of Wall
Street and the complex fields of everyday life? How is cultural
production implicated in the spread of financial ideas, metaphors, forms
of measurement and tropes of subjectivity? How have debt, investments,
hedged bets and securitization become discursive and material practices
in a mediated landscape? How do film, print culture, art and television
encode or decode financial ideas? How are literature, urban space, games
and policy resonant or dissonant with global financial flows? How does
financialization intersect with gender, race, class, colonialism or
other forms of oppression? And how might we envision pathways out of and
beyond the financialized imagination?
This issue brings together an exciting array of established and emerging
scholars to help answer these questions.
For more information and to order subscriptions and single issues, visit
TOPIA at http://www.yorku.ca/topia.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Editorial
Max Haiven and Jody Berland - The Financialized Imagination (In Memory
of Stuart Hall)
Articles
1. FIELDS OF SPECULATIVE POWER
John Clarke - Imagined Economies: Austerity and the Moral Economy of
‘Fairness’
Mathias Nilges - Finance Capital and the Time of the Novel or, Money
Without Narrative Qualities
Matthew Flisfeder - Debt: The Sublimated Object of Capital
Rob Aitken - Games and the Subjugated Knowledges of Finance: Art and
Science in the Speculative Imaginary
2. LEVERAGED SITES
Andrew Calcutt - Fictitious Capital: London and the Financial Imagination
Cathy Greenfield and Peter Williams - From Shadowy Zone to Daily
Routine: Finance Culture in Australia
Sarah Blacker - “Your DNA Doesn’t Need to be Your Destiny”: Colonialism,
Public Health, and the Financialization of Medicine
Chris Arthur - Financial Literacy Education as Public Pedagogy for the
Capitalist Debt Economy
3. FINANCIALIZED MEDIATIONS
Mark Hayward - Settling Accounts: On the Subject of Economic Confessions
Michelle Stewart and Jason Pine - Vocational Embodiments of the
Precariat in The Girlfriend Experience and Magic Mike
Robert Hutton - The Gamification of Finance
Sarah E.K. Smith - Making Sense of the “Endless Play of Signs” in the
Work of Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge
Jamie Lynn Magnusson and Elizabeth Abergel - The Art of
(Bio)Surveillance: Bioart and the Financialization of Life Systems
Offerings
Michael Stein - “Do You Own an Oil Company?” A Political Consideration
of the Financialized Subject
David E Maynard - Finding Financialization in Satire
Simon Orpana and Evan Mauro - First as Tragedy, Then as Ford: Performing
the Biopolitical Image in the Age of Austerity, from the G20 to Toronto
City Hall
Matthew Tiessen - Giving Credit Where Credit’s Due: Making Visible the
Ex Nihilo Dimensions of Money’s “Agency”
Review Essays
Toni Pape - Writing Resistance: Sleeplessness, Poetry and the Right to
the City under Financial Capitalism
Susan Pell - A Puzzle Constantly Changing Itself: Cultural Studies in
the 21st Century
Colin J. Campbell - “Progressive” Canadian Politics and the Paroxysm of
Identity
Reviews
Stephen Gray - Does He Know It’s Neoliberalism After All?
Paulina Mickiewicz - Deconstructing Disability
Trevor Holmes - Feasible Utopias, Frustrated
Matthew Ryan Smith - Toward the Indigenization of Canadian Museums
Sharday Mosurinjohn - Language, Politics and the Novel: Rancière’s
Aesthetic History of Problem-Solving in Poetics
TOPIA provides a venue for critical research in cultural studies in
Canada and beyond. The journal publishes original research and
theoretical essays on culture that are accessible to a wide readership
in the humanities and social sciences, along with critical clusters,
offerings, and book reviews. TOPIA fosters the study of culture in
relation to nationality, technology, nature, discourse, gender, race,
media and the politics of space. Areas of research relevant to this
mandate include: analysis of popular culture, visual and auditory
culture, old and new media, and literature; the historical,
institutional and aesthetic formation of Canadian and postcolonial
culture; indigenous studies; cultural memory, museums, galleries,
archives, and the fine arts; environmental cultural studies, including
but not limited to urban environments, material cultures, biopolitics,
city planning, architecture, landscape, human-animal relations, and
posthumanism; technocultural and technoscience studies; global cultural
industries; nationalism, multiculturalism, diaspora and the contemporary
nation state in the era of global integration. This work is connected by
an interdisciplinary concern with the roles played by culture in
historical and contemporary social transformation.
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