Speculative endeavors

Cultures of knowledge and capital in the long nineteenth century

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Manchester University Press
Edited by Selina Foltinek, Karin Hoepker, Katrin Horn
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Speculative endeavours contributes to an emerging field of scholarship that focuses on alternative forms of knowledge production and speculation in nineteenth century US-American society. It sheds light on unofficial knowledges such as insider information, rumour, gossip, slander, emphasising how knowledges excluded by institutional discourses and authorities form a core part of the developing market economy. Ranging from the Early Republic to the Gilded Age, contributions analyse entanglements of financial, cultural, and social capital. They focus on social actors who differ from the newly minted ideal of the (free, white, male) entrepreneurial individual. The speculative endeavours discussed include illicit communications located in slave quarters and domestic spaces, communal interventions into a commercialised print market, debates on immigrant fiduciary and legal competency, and disciplinary techniques of pecuniary pedagogy. Taken together they offer unprecedented interdisciplinary insights into an emerging age of capital.

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Contributor Bio

Selina Foltinek is a doctoral candidate of American Studies at the University of Bayreuth and a teacher of History, English, and Political Science
Karin Hoepker is Associate Professor of North American Studies at Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg
Katrin Horn is Professor of Gender Studies at the Institute of English and American Studies at the University of Greifswald

9781526182159.jpg
9781526182159.jpg