Anna Kassulke provides a penetrating scrutiny of the most
globally important concept of our time: money. Dr. Kassulke has
gathered together a rich selection of money stories and characters,
and shows how they function in terms of both our social relations
as well as our psychological and cognitive makeup.
Money was invented when human beings minted coins. Then we
printed paper money, and now we have e-cash. Or so the fiction of
money's origins would have it. Dr. Kassulke unveils the purely
mythological status money has in contemporary Western societies.
She presents a wide range of concepts attached to money in its
various forms, from coins to paper to e-cash. Examples are drawn
from children's literature, popular novels, films, advertising,
biographies, financial journalism, political-economic theory, and
sociology.
With considerable sensitivity to both textual analysis and
historical context, Kassulke provides a penetrating scrutiny of the
most globally important concept of our time: money. She pinpoints
how money's mythologies determine social relations as well as
subjectivity. Perceptive, lucid, and elegant, "Cooking the Books"
exposes an important area of cultural activity that will be of
great interest to scholars and students in cultural studies,
communications studies, and comparative literature.
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