“Difficult Money”: The Question for the Next Revision of the Nature of Money

Book review: Bandelj, N., Wherry, F. F., Zelizer, V. A. (eds). (2017). Money Talks: Explaining How Money Really Works, Princeton: Princeton University Press. 288 p

  • Stanislav Pashkov
Keywords: money, fungibility, financial institutions, earmarking, bitcoin, bank cards

Abstract

This book, edited by N. Bandelj, F. Wherry, and V. Zelizer, comprises a series of articles united in a collective monograph; it opens the reader to a multilateral view of the nature of money as a system of meanings and signs, and clarifies the mechanisms of the formation and functioning of financial flows and institutions. Trends associated with the active dissemination of new forms of money that are not tied to a specific financial system, as well as the expanding practice of the consumption of goods and services related to issues of morality and ethics, are becoming relevant. The authors were tasked with revising the conceptual framework for the study of money, and the main goal was to show the principles of the functioning of money in the financial system and, to a greater extent, in the system of social relations. In the book, the conceptual framework is examined in five sections, each of which provides sociological, cultural, anthropological, and historical perspectives. The authors of 14 chapters illustrate the connection of their theses with the approach of Viviana Zelizer, as outlined in a number of her famous works, and the analysis of money itself is based on the subject of the fungibility of mediums, functions, and meanings (earmarking) of monetary units, the understanding of financial accounting by people themselves (mental accounting), and the influence of the state on this process. This review aims to define the logic of the presentation of the material in the book in order to better understand the theoretical and empirical principles set forth in the chapters.

Author Biography

Stanislav Pashkov

Postgraduate Student, Faculty of Social Sciences; Research Assistant, Laboratory for Studies in Economic Sociology; Lecturer, Department of Economic Sociology, National Research University Higher School of Economics. Address: 20 Myasnitskaya str., 101000, Moscow, Russian Federation.

Published
2020-12-01
How to Cite
PashkovS. (2020). “Difficult Money”: The Question for the Next Revision of the Nature of Money. Journal of Economic Sociology, 21(5), 94-103. Retrieved from https://tpjournal.hse.ru/index.php/ecsoc/article/view/11715
Section
New Books