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Indebted life and money culture: payday lending in the United Kingdom
Authors:Paul Langley  Ben Anderson  James Ash  Rachel Gordon
Institution:1. Paul Langley, Department of Geography, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom.;2. Ben Anderson, Department of Geography, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom. E-mail: ben.anderson@durham.ac.uk;3. James Ash, School of Arts and Cultures, Newcastle University, Armstrong Building, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, United Kingdom. E-mail: James.Ash@newcastle.ac.uk;4. Rachel Gordon, School of Arts and Cultures, Newcastle University, Armstrong Building, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, United Kingdom. E-mail: Rachel.Gordon@newcastle.ac.uk
Abstract:Critical social scientific research holds that credit–debt is a principal economic and governing relation in contemporary economy and society, but largely neglects money’s role in indebted life. Drawing on qualitative research in the payday loan market in the United Kingdom, the paper shows that borrowers typically relate to loans in monetary rather than financial terms and incorporate them into practices of payment, spending and online banking. To analyse how indebted life is variously experienced and enacted through money, the concept of money culture is developed to refer to money’s culture, money’s meanings and money’s affects. Borrowers enter into and negotiate payday loans through a digitally mediated money culture that both mobilizes and runs counter to money’s powerful fictions as circulating universal equivalent and calculative means of account.
Keywords:debt  money  payday lending  digital mediation  online banking
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