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In: Urban history, Band 41, Heft 4, S. 727-729
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Journal of European Studies, Band 32, Heft 125-126, S. 121-134
ISSN: 1740-2379
In: Europe: magazine of the European Community, Heft 326, S. 24-27
ISSN: 0279-9790, 0191-4545
In: International journal of information management, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 5-13
ISSN: 0268-4012
In: British journal of visual impairment: BJVI, Band 8, Heft 2, S. 70-71
ISSN: 1744-5809
The growth of personal indebtedness in the UK has become of increasing significance in the years following the 2007/8 global financial crises as both a public issue and within the personal troubles of individuals. What distinguishes contemporary personal debt is its relationship to the political and economic transformations of the last 30 years, characterised as the process of neoliberalization. This process is allied with a particularly virulent form of global financial capitalism that has increasingly come to dominate all aspects of society, from the institutional structures of civil society to the minutiae of everyday life. In order to draw out the main features of this process and its role in the normalization of debt, this thesis addresses two distinct, but interrelated questions: first, how has personal debt been framed through the promotion and dissemination of particular policy and public discourses?; and second, how have attitudes and behaviours towards personal debt been transformed as everyday cultural practices and understandings? First, the research is guided by the post-disciplinary approach of 'cultural political economy', using the concept of the 'economic imaginary' to identify the evolving material-discursive production of meaning in government policy-making that has framed personal debt. Second, the research examines how intersubjective meanings of personal debt have become resonant within everyday practices of credit and debt through a series of biographical narrative participant interviews. The two strands of research are brought together within a cultural political economy framework. This thesis demonstrates how established neoliberal embedding at policy-level has unswervingly framed a conception of 'consumer freedom' that involves increasing access to credit markets, but emergent extra-discursive situations have always constrained such framings. At the same time, increased access to credit has meant a greater acceptance of debt by people who negotiate these transformations by developing modes of calculation that reduce the moral complications of debt accumulation. However, it also involves being vulnerable to greater risks, as they are exposed to the same extra-discursive constraints.
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Account of John Gervais with David Ellis for hat and gloves.
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Regarding the return of the trunk and cloak of his son, David Ellis, who was dismissed from the Academy. ; Transcription by Raymond Bouchard. Transcriptions may be subject to error.
BASE
In: Studies in the history of Christian traditions Volume 186
A high school drop-out who served in the American army and then managed to slip into Oxford on the G.I. bill, Frank Cioffi gained a considerable public reputation in Freudian and Wittgensteinian circles. Frank Cioffi: The Philosopher in Shirt-Sleeves is an account of his conversation written in a Boswellian spirit, capturing the sharp intelligence, boisterous sense of humour and wealth of illustration Cioffi was able to bring to bear on life's biggest problems when he was, as it were, off-duty. Tackling subjects such as the unruly body, the challenge of art, dealing with failure, the lure of
In: International journal of human resource management, Band 23, Heft 10, S. 2087-2107
ISSN: 1466-4399
In: International studies review, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 473-475
ISSN: 1468-2486
In: International studies review, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 473-475
ISSN: 1521-9488