ABSTRACT
Money and Moralities in Contemporary Asia provides original, nuanced insights into social meanings of money and wealth in moral economies of Asia. Through case studies from South and Southeast Asia, the collection sheds important light on how the new mobilities and wealth created by neoliberal globalization transform people's ways of life, notions of personhood, and their meaning making of the world. It highlights the moral dilemmas and anxieties emerging from the profound socio-economic transformations that are taking place across the region and deepens our understanding of local cultures as well as the inner contradictions of global capital in Asian contexts. With rich ethnographic insights and a diverse range of empirical contexts, chapters in this volume reveal multifaceted complexities and contradictions in the relationship between money and moralities. Money, they affirm, is not an impersonal, objective economic instrument with homogenizing powers but a culturally constructed and socially mediated currency in which meanings are constantly contested and re-negotiated across time and space.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |24 pages
Introduction
part I|66 pages
Money and Moral Selfhood in the Market Economy
chapter 3|25 pages
Mobility and Flexible Moralities
chapter 4|18 pages
‘Billions and the Retrogression of Knowledge’?
part II|82 pages
Social Currencies and the Morality of Gender
chapter 5|25 pages
House, Car, or Permanent Residency?
chapter 6|27 pages
‘Your Vagina is a Rice Paddy’
part III|78 pages
The Social Life of Money in Asian Moral Economies
chapter 8|23 pages
Money, Maturity, and Migrant Aspirations
chapter 9|27 pages
Christianity as the Sixth Aspirational ‘C’
chapter 10|24 pages
Cash, Women, and the Nation
part |7 pages
Epilogue
