ABSTRACT

Why do critics and celebrants of globalization concur that international trade and finance represent an inexorable globe-bestriding force with a single logic? The Known Economy shows that both camps rest on the same ideas about how the world is scaled. Two centuries ago romantic and rationalist theorists concurred that the world was divided into discrete nations, moving at different rates toward a "modernity", split between love and money. Though differing over whether this history is tragedy or triumph, they united in projecting an empty "international" space in which a Moloch-like global capitalism could lurk.

The Known Economy tracks the colonial development of national accounting and re-examines the ways gender and heteronormativity are built in to economic representation. It re-interprets the post-WWII spread of standardized economic statistics as the project of international organizations looking over the shoulders of national governments, rather than the expanding power of national governments over populations.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Sarkozy versus GDP

part I|102 pages

The voice of economy

chapter |2 pages

Introduction to Part I

chapter 1|17 pages

Love or money

chapter 2|14 pages

A Jewish economy in Palestine

chapter 3|19 pages

Body of the nation

chapter 4|15 pages

Shape of the world

chapter 5|21 pages

Discovering economies in British Africa

chapter 6|12 pages

The IMF makes the world

part II|44 pages

Romantic responses

chapter |3 pages

Introduction to Part II

chapter 7|12 pages

Romantic political economy

chapter 8|7 pages

Shock of the modern

chapter 9|12 pages

Jameson’s postmodern

chapter 10|8 pages

Spirit of finance

part III|13 pages

Opening up

chapter 11|8 pages

Time and finance

chapter 12|3 pages

Numbered things