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Confidence Games: Money and Markets in a World without Redemption
by Mark C. Taylor
University of Chicago Press
October 2004
Awash in a sea of data that seems to have no meaning and
bombarded by images and sounds transmitted from around the globe 24/7, people
are no longer sure what is real and what is fake. Artists recycle ads in their
paintings and businesses use images of artists in their ads; politicians mount
campaigns based on hit films; and bankers make billions trading incomprehensible
financial products backed by nothing more than abstract figures and
signs.
In Confidence Games, Mark
C. Taylor considers the implications of these developments for our digital and
increasingly virtual economy. According to Taylor, money and markets do not
exist in a vacuum but grow in a profoundly cultural medium, reflecting and in
turn shaping their world. To understand the recent changes in our economy, it is
not enough to analyze the impact of politics and technology--one must consider
the influence of art, philosophy, and religion as well.
Bringing John
Calvin, G. W. F. Hegel, and Adam Smith to Wall Street by way of Las Vegas,
Taylor first explores the historical and psychological origins of money, the
importance of religious beliefs and practices for the emergence of markets, and
the unexpected role of religion and art in the classical understanding of
economics. He then moves to an account of economic developments during the past
four decades, exploring the dawn of our new information age, the growing
virtuality of money and markets, and the complexity of the networks by which
monetary value is now negotiated.
Returning full circle to a version of
the market first proposed by Adam Smith when he used theology and aesthetics to
rethink economics, Confidence Games
closes with a plea for a conception of life that embraces uncertainty and
insecurity as signs of the openness of the future. Like religion and economics,
life is a confidence game in which the challenge is not to find redemption but
to learn to live without it.
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