ABSTRACT

Global Finance on Screen is the first collection exclusively dedicated to a growing body of multi-format and multimedia audiovisual work that this book designates as the finance film. Finance film provides critical visualizations of the secretive, elitist, PR firewalled, and gender and race-biased world of finance, and its mysterious characters, jargon and products. It reconstructs for the screen and for broader audiences finance’s logics, responsibilities, practices, and ethos, and traces the effects of money, markets, investment, credit, debt, bubbles, and crashes on our well-being, desires, values, and actions.

The chapters for this interdisciplinary collection are written by European and North American scholars in film studies, anthropology, business ethics, cultural studies, political economy, and sociology. They reveal and evaluate the ability of film to document financial cultures; reflect economic, cultural and political transformations related to financialization; indicate the alienating and exploitative consequences of the growing role played by financial services in the global economy; mobilize social action against finance’s excesses; as well as spread finance and capitalist mythology. The collection offers in-depth investigations of feature films such as Wall Street, Freefall, Margin Call, Justice&Co, The Wolf of Wall Street, and The Big Short, and documentaries such as Inside Job, Capitalism: A Love Story and In a Strange Land.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part 1|69 pages

Telling finance stories

chapter 1|23 pages

Narrating finance capital

Explorations in speculation, crisis and austerity

chapter 4|18 pages

“Financial wisdom” as discursive position

How financial expertise is constructed in documentary film

part 2|74 pages

Critical interventions

chapter 5|16 pages

Finance, crisis, and Hollywood

Critique and recuperation of Wall Street in films about the Great Recession

chapter 8|19 pages

No ethics, no heroes

How immorality flattens Wall Street characters

part 3|58 pages

Screening crisis and recessions

chapter 9|16 pages

Documentary treatments and cultural hierarchies

The 2008 financial crash in American documentaries

chapter 10|19 pages

Global financial crisis in local filmic scenarios

Transnational cinema of the Great Recession 1

chapter 11|21 pages

Precarity and vulnerability

Documentaries on the crisis in Spain