Acknowledgements.
Introduction. .
Part I: Production.
1. A Mixed Economy of Fashion Design (Angela McRobbie).
2. Net-Working for a Living: Irish Software Developers in the Global Workplace (Seán Ó’Riain).
3. Instrumentalizing the Truth of Practice (Katie Vann and Geoffrey C. Bowker).
4. The Economy of Qualities (Michel Callon, Cécile Méadel and Vololona Rabeharisoa).
Part II: Finance and Money.
5. Inside the Economy of Appearances (Anna Tsing).
6. Physics and Finance: S-Terms and Modern Finance as a Topic for Science Studies (Donald MacKenzie).
7. Traders' Engagement with Markets: A Postsocial Relationship (Karin Knorr Cetina and Urs Bruegger).
Part III: Regulation.
8. Varieties of Protectors (Frederico Varese).
9. The Agony of Mammon (Lewis H. Lapham).
10. Governing by Numbers: Why Calculative Practices Matter (Peter Miller).
Part IV: Commodity Chains.
11. African/Asian/Uptown/Downtown (P. Stoller).
12. Retailers, Knowledges and Changing Commodity Networks: The Case of the Cut Flower Trade (A. Hughes).
13. Culinary Networks and Cultural Connections: A Conventions Perspective (Jonathan Murdoch and Mara Miele).
Part V: Consumption.
14. Making Love in Supermarkets (Daniel Miller).
15. Window Shopping at Home: Classifieds, Catalogues and New Consumer Skills (Alison. J. Clarke).
16. What’s in a Price? An Ethnography of Tribal Art at Auction (Haidy Geismar).
17. It’s Showtime: On the Workplace Geographies of Display in a Restaurant in Southeast England (Philip Crang).
Part VI: Economy of Passions.
18. Feeling Management: From Private to Commercial Uses (Arlie Hochschild).
19. Negotiating the Bar: Sex, Money and the Uneasy Politics of Third Space (Lisa Law).
20. A Joint’s a Joint (S. Denton and R. Morris).
21. Marking Time with Nike: The Illusion of the Durable (Celia Lury).
Index.
Ash Amin is Professor of Geography and Head of the
Department of Geography at Durham University.
Nigel Thrift is Professor of Geography in the School of Geographical Sciences at Bristol University.
"Even a good old Chicago School economist can find much in the book
to widen her horizons. That ‘the economy’ is embedded in social
relations and is linguistic and is ethical is obvious to any
student of society. Yet Samuelsonian economics denies all this. The
Reader should open eyes all round." Deirdre McCloskey, University
of Illinois at Chicago
"This is a terrific collection! Amin and Thrift have brought
together a rich set of studies to make the case that in economic
life, calculation is cultural. Across a wonderful range of settings
– from financial exchanges to supermarkets – this lively volume is
essential reading for anyone studying economic sociology." David
Stark, University of Columbia
"Amin and Thrift's reader is an indispensable purchase for those
who research and teach on the economy-culture problematic. Its 22
essays represent the wide diversity of viewpoints that have emerged
this last decade or so - theoretically, topically and politically
... There really is something in here for everybody, and I think
this book should be read by those wishing to know more about the
culture-economy debate, as well as those familiar with its main
contours ... I dare you not to buy it." Noel Castree, Cultural
Geographies
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