An edition of Fictions of state (1996)

Fictions of state

culture and credit in Britain, 1694-1994

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 30, 2024 | History
An edition of Fictions of state (1996)

Fictions of state

culture and credit in Britain, 1694-1994

  • 1 Want to read

In this ambitious book, Patrick Brantlinger offers a cultural history of Great Britain focused on the concept of "public credit," from the 1694 founding of the Bank of England to the present. He draws on literary texts ranging from Augustan satire such as Gulliver's Travels to postmodern satire such as Martin Amis's Money: A Suicide Note, all of which critique the misrecognition of public credit as wealth.

The economic foundations of modern nation-states involved national debt, public credit, and paper money. Brantlinger traces the emergence of modern, imperial Great Britain from those foundations. He analyzes the process whereby nationalism, both the cause and the result of wars and imperial expansion, multiplied national debt and produced crises of public credit resolved only through more nationalism and war.

During the first half of the eighteenth century, conservatives attacked public credit as fetishistic and characterized national debt as alchemical. From the 1850s, the stabilizing theories of public credit authored by David Hume, Adam Smith, Henry Thornton, and others helped initiate the first "social science" economics.

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In the nineteenth century, literary romanticism both paralleled and questioned early capitalist discourse on public credit and nationalism, while the Victorian novel refigured the national debt as individual, private credit and debt. During the era of high modernism and Keynesian economics, the notion of high culture as genuine value recast the debate over money and national indebtedness.

Brantlinger relates this cultural-historical trajectory to Marxist, poststructuralist, and postcolonial theories about the decline of the European empires alter World War II, the global debt crisis, and the weakening of western nation-states in the postmodern era.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
291

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Fictions of state
Fictions of state: culture and credit in Britain, 1694-1994
1996, Cornell University Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 265-282) and index.

Published in
Ithaca

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
823.009/355
Library of Congress
PR830.E37 B73 1996, PR830.E37B73 1996

The Physical Object

Pagination
xii, 291 p. :
Number of pages
291

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL806515M
Internet Archive
fictionsofstatec00bran
ISBN 10
0801431905, 0801482879
LCCN
95043125
OCLC/WorldCat
33404133
Library Thing
2426504
Goodreads
320269
2975260

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