Occupy wall street and the economic imagination

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Abstract

This article explores the making of an expansive and expanding economic imagination in disparate Occupy sites-the Alternative Banking working group of Occupy Wall Street, the daily life of lists in Liberty Square, née Zuccotti Park, and the work of Strike Debt. In particular, I focus on transformative possibility in unanticipated places. Where anthropology and critical theory have often sought out capitalism's otherwises for inspiration and potential, the expansion of the economic imagination I trace here suggests that the centers constitute zones of possibility as well. I aim to show not only the conditions of possibility for a certain kind of imaginative work in the dense and seemingly definitive spaces of financial expertise but also a remarkable, and largely unrecognized, contemporary conversation around the future of banking, foreclosures, and democratized finance.

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APA

Appel, H. (2014). Occupy wall street and the economic imagination. Cultural Anthropology, 29(4), 602–625. https://doi.org/10.14506/ca29.4.02

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