Artigo Revisado por pares

Rhetoric, Risk, and Markets: The Dot-Com Bubble

2010; Routledge; Volume: 96; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/00335631003796669

ISSN

1479-5779

Autores

G. Thomas Goodnight, Sandy Green,

Tópico(s)

Financial Markets and Investment Strategies

Resumo

Abstract Post-conventional economic theories are assembled to inquire into the contingent, mimetic, symbolic, and material spirals unfolding the dot-com bubble, 1992–2002. The new technologies bubble is reconstructed as a rhetorical movement across the practices of the hybrid market-industry risk culture of communications. The legacies of the bubble task economic criticism with developing critical capacity sufficient to address attention-driven economies of worth. Keywords: MimesisBubblesRhetoric of EconomicsAttention EconomyEconomic Criticism Acknowledgements G. Thomas Goodnight wishes to thank the Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, University of Iowa, and the Huntington Library for support. Sandy Green wishes to thank the University of Southern California Center for Interdisciplinary Research for support. Notes 1. Charles Mackay, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (1841; New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1996), 118. 2. 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Robert Shiller, "Why We'll Always Have More Money than Sense," Newsweek, December 30, 2009. Additional informationNotes on contributorsG. Thomas Goodnight G. Thomas Goodnight is Professor at USC's Annenberg School of Communication Sandy Green Sandy Edward Green, Jr. is Assistant Professor of management at the Marshall School, University of Southern California

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