03606nam 22006613 450 991099388580332120181218132046.097816431500009781643150024(electronic bk.)1643150022(electronic bk.)https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10209707(OCoLC)1060619465(OCoLC)on1060619465(WaSeSS)IndRDA00125298(CKB)1013418581302786(MiU)10.3998/mpub.10209707(ODN)ODN0010989374(oapen)doab30966(EXLCZ)99101341858130278620181218h20182018 uy 0engur|n|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierPromissory notes on the literary conditions of debt /by Robin Truth GoodmanAmherst, Massachutsetts :Lever Press,[2018]©20181 online resource (173 pages)Title from eBook information screen..Print version: 9781643150000 (OCoLC)1061091043 1643150006 Includes bibliographical references (pages 119-126).Futures and fictions : the right to make promises and the object that never was -- Debt's geographies : inequality, or development's dance with dead capital.There is no doubt that the beginning of the twenty-first century was marked by crises of debt. Less well known is that literature played a historical role in defining and teaching debt to the public. Promissory Notes: On the Literary Conditions of Debt addresses how neoliberal finance has depended upon a historical linking of geopolitical inequality and financial representation that positions the so-called "Third World" as negative value, or debt. Starting with an analysis of Anthony Trollope's novel, The Eustace Diamonds, Goodman shows how colonized spaces came to inhabit this negative value. Promissory Notesargues that the twentieth-century continues to apply literary innovations in character, subjectivity, temporal and spatial representation to construct debt as the negative creation of value not only in reference to objects, but also houses, credit cards, students, and, in particular, "Third World" geographies, often leading to crisis. Yet, late twentieth century and early twenty-first literary texts, such as Soyinka's The Road and Ngugi's Wizard of the Crow, address the negative space of the indebted world also as a critiqueof the financial take-over of the postcolonial developmental state. Looking to situations like the Puerto Rican debt crisis, Goodman demonstrates how financial discourse is articulated through social inequalities and how literature can both expose and contest the imposition of a morality of debt as a mode of anti-democratic control.Debt in literatureLiterature and societyDebtSocial aspectsNeoliberalismEqualityDemocracyDebt in literature.Literature and society.DebtSocial aspects.Neoliberalism.Equality.Democracy.820.93553LIT000000LIT006000bisacshGoodman Robin Truth1966-866879Project Muse.MiUMiUDOCUMENT9910993885803321Promissory Notes2958142UNINAWilliams College