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Everyday Market Lives

Everyday Market Lives – the University of Warwick, 13th February 2015

Organised by Lynne Pettinger (Sociology, Warwick) and Liz Moor (Media & Communications, Goldsmiths)

Capitalist societies routinely ask people to make judgements of value and worth, and to decide between an array of competing choices, as part of their everyday lives. Economic knowledge and expertise is thus not something that resides only with bankers, financial journalists and government accountants; it exists in a tacit form within the routines of daily life in capitalist society, and is a key part of people’s experiences at work, in consumption, in leisure, in media use, in practices of caring for children and elderly relatives, or in financial planning and household management. The kinds of resources (economic, social, intellectual and imaginative) that people are able to marshal, and how they understand what they want to, and are able to, make happen with these resources has profound implications for overall wellbeing, and for people’s sense of themselves as parents, workers, citizens, patients, and so on.

The workshop brought together scholars from diverse fields to explore the ways in which people come to understand themselves as economic actors, and the kinds of knowledge about markets that they deploy, develop or acquire in doing so. Everyday economic activity involves people in making sense, making decisions and making meaning through the possibilities and limitations that income affords them: desires are tempered, the judgements of others are felt, and new expertise may need to be acquired. We invite papers with an explicit focus on ordinary, routine, banal, or everyday forms of economic action.

To hear each paper, click on the author’s name:

Marta Olcón-Kubicka

The moral dimension of financial arrangements in young family households in Poland

Shireen Kanji

Balancing work and care: decision-making in heterosexual couples and mothers’ exit from the workplace

Andreas Streinzer

Everyday Brokering: skilled practices of making ends meet in Volos, Greece

Trine Pallesen and Rasmus Ploug Jenle

Making electricity consumption count

Yu-Hsiang Chen and Philip Roscoe

Practices and meanings of lay stock investing in Taiwan

Clea Bourne

Sensemaking while speculating: collective understandings of risk-taking as an economic skill

Sandy Ross

Morals, Price and Profit: market knowledge in Final Fantasy XI

Lotte Bjorklund Larsen

The decreasing circulation of cash in contemporary Sweden and the perception of money

Dan Neyland, Marta Gasparin & Lucia Siu

An international experiment in mundane market exchanges

Mili Kalia

The social meaning of migrant money

Dawn Lyon

What is a fish worth? Sensory knowledge and the production of value at Billingsgate

Event:

13th February 2015


Deadline for abstracts:

31st October 2014