Women Talking Business: Domestic Settings for Economic Discourses in The Squatter and the Don

2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 359-401
Author(s):  
Mike Lemon
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Katherine Gillen

This chapter focuses on the significance of intrinsic chastity to aristocratic selfhood and to the social and metaphysical hierarchies that support it. Whereas chastity is often depicted as an intrinsic good, characterized by an identity of essence and representation, Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida, Webster’s The White Devil, and Middleton and Rowley’s The Changeling deploy economic discourses to dismantle ideologies of intrinsic chastity, revealing it to be a social construct whose worth is determined by outside forces. Conclusions reached about chastity ultimately influence the plays’ presentations of aristocratic men, suggesting that their personal worth may rest not in class-based virtue but rather in the more relativistic dynamics of the marketplace. In these tragedies, performative identity arises through resistance to discourses of intrinsic chastity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (33) ◽  
pp. e16347
Author(s):  
George Saliba Manske ◽  
Liliane Geisler

This essay aims to problematize how certain school practices are enabled and supported for their existence, since different economic discourses in statements that materialize in the school and students. From this perspective, we believe that rethinking the school space with characteristics of modernity in a post-modern scenario is to enhance essential functions for the continuation of our own existence as a public and collective institution. We assume that to question the potentialized discourses of neoliberalism in education, rooted in the development of economic progress and the ultra-market, in which interests and responsibilities of the State shift and mix from private social actions in the school space with interests of market, becomes an indispensable task. We argue that neoliberal marketing languages ​​are active in the forms and functions of contemporary schools, advocating the need for a debate that emphasizes education based on the development of school subjects committed to the public and the social.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuto Tominaga

An indirect tax imposed on a seller of a product assumes "shifting of tax burden" from the seller to the buyer, while the amount of burden each entity bears is said to be unknown before economic analysis. Since taxation is a restriction on property rights, the amount of tax burden, or property appropriated by the government, should be definite. This paper shows that such "tax shift" is a money illusion; when one pays the consideration for the same product, the amount of money has the same purchasing power that buys the product, regardless of whether there is a tax or not. This leads to the conclusion that the seller bears the whole burden of the "indirect" tax. At the same time, price rise must also be a kind of burden to the buyer. This suggests that there exist two kinds of tax burden notions so far used without distinction both in legal and economic discourses.


Author(s):  
Cecelia Lynch

This chapter analyzes religious communities’ role in peacebuilding vis-à-vis dominant political and economic discourses of the colonial past and the postcolonial present. This comparison demonstrates that such dominant discourses—of colonial expansion for “civilizing” purposes in the past, and for neoliberal modes of economic structuring in the context of the global war on terror in the present—entangle both strategic peacebuilders and religious communities. It is critically necessary, therefore, for peacebuilders to practice reflexivity about their own assumptions, connections, and relationships with all actors and processes in the peacebuilding environment. They should constantly interrogate whether and how the experiences of the past shape problems, strategies, and/or attitudes toward societies in conflict in the present. Moreover, religious communities and strategic peacebuilders should reclaim the prophetic voice extant in all religious traditions to challenge more directly the unjust economic, political, and social structures that inhibit the advancement of justpeace.


1993 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Crewe ◽  
Z Forster

The fashion system, as a powerful cultural signifier, offers some important clues into the links between production and consumption change. In this paper, the workings of the fashion system are explored, with a focus on changing consumption patterns and new market trends, which may have the potential to even out the profoundly unequal relationship which exists between high-street multiples and small independent retailers. The suggestion is made that the fashion system is polarising at present, that design-led boutiques are enjoying renewed popularity. Not only is this benefiting local design talent, it is also a means of affording greater autonomy to local manufacturers. The emergence of one particular fashion agglomeration, the Nottingham Lace Market, is traced, with local linkage structures looked at through the interplay of manufacturers, designers, retailers, and local policymakers. In this way, an attempt is made to offer a more expansive investigation of flexible production systems, one which is not grounded exclusively in economic-centred narratives but which recognises that the factors which shape the development of local agglomerations are rooted in production and consumption shifts, and are dependent on multiple political, cultural, and economic discourses.


2005 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 661-682
Author(s):  
TAE-GYUN PARK

‘[P]ower of vested interests is vastly exaggerated compared with the gradual encroachment of ideas…. The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else.’ (John Maynard Keynes, 1964[1936], 383)


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