The Temporalities of the Market
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Anthropologist
- Vol. 105 (2) , 255-265
- https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.2003.105.2.255
Abstract
Social theorists' recent interest in global capitalism is partially driven by their sense of "being behind" in a changed and changing world. It is also part of their larger efforts to critique the present. In this article, I seek to find analogues of this sense of temporal incongruity between knowledge and its objects in the Tokyo financial markets. My focus is on the anxieties and hopes animating some Japanese securities traders' life choices. I argue that these traders' differing anxieties and hopes resulted from their divergent senses of the temporal incongruity among trading strategies, workplaces, and Japan's national location vis–a–vis the United States. Drawing on a parallel between social theorists' and traders' efforts to generate prospective momentum in their work, I propose that anthropologists investigate the work of temporal incongruity in knowledge formation more generally. [Keywords: time, Utopian vision, knowledge formation, financial markets, Japan]Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Repressed futures: financial derivatives' theological unconsciousEconomy and Society, 2002
- Cultures of Circulation: The Imaginations of ModernityPublic Culture, 2002
- 'It's the romance, not the finance, that makes the business worth pursuing': disclosing a new market cultureEconomy and Society, 2001
- Faith and its fulfillment: agency, exchange, and the Fijian aesthetics of completionAmerican Ethnologist, 2000
- Emergent Forms of Life: Anthropologies of Late or PostmodernitiesAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1999
- Sexualities without Genders and Other Queer Utopiasdiacritics, 1994
- The Cultural Anthropology of Time: A Critical EssayAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1992
- Directions in the Anthropology of Contemporary JapanAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1991
- "Permanent Employment" Faces Recession Slow Growth, and an Aging Work ForceThe Journal of Japanese Studies, 1979
- TIME, WORK-DISCIPLINE, AND INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISMPast & Present, 1967