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Placing the ‘post-social’ market: Identity and spatiality in the xeno-economy

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posted on 2010-10-12, 12:45 authored by Angus Cameron, Geoff Lightfoot, Simon Lilley, Steven D. Brown
Following Knorr Cetina and Bruegger (2002), an understanding of financial markets as ‘post-social’ environments has gained sway. This claim is premised on the idea that new technologies, in particular screen displays of complex real-time financial information, have displaced ‘the market’ from the social and economic relations in which it might otherwise be assumed to be embedded. We argue that recent historical transformations in trading and markets are better characterized as ‘re-spatializations’ involving shifts in the placing and mediation of market spatiality. Material from the City Lives project and other sources is analysed to explore the transformation of the London International Financial Futures Exchange (LIFFE) from the early 1980s onwards. Using the notion of ‘xeno-economy’ (cf. Rotman’s (1987) ‘xeno-money’) it is argued that the spatial redistributions of the market did not so much efface sociality as set up new kinds of relations between local traders and institutions, notably mediated through geographical displaced ‘trading arcades’. The immanence of modes of sociality to markets as intrinsically and necessarily social objects is thereby emphasized.

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Citation

Marketing Theory, 2010, 10 (3), pp. 299-312.

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Marketing Theory

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

1470-5931;1741-301X

Copyright date

2010

Available date

2010-10-12

Publisher version

http://mtq.sagepub.com/content/10/3/299

Language

en

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