Hello everyone,

We hope you can join us for tomorrow's special talk.  Details are below.




Friday, February 7th at 12:00 Noon in E53-354

NICHOLAS D’AVELLA, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Science, Technology, Medicine & Society
University of California, Berkeley

Ecologies of Investment: Crisis Histories and Brick Futures in Argentina

Abstract:  In this talk I describe an ecological approach to investment in 
Argentina, which involves seeing investments as part of an emergent web of 
relations among constitutive and constituting parts.  Such a sensibility is an 
important feature of Argentine economic life, in which no investment is treated 
like any other.  Care about attributing equivalence and attention to the 
relationality of investments was also central to how people worked to save 
their savings in the aftermath of the Argentine economic crisis of 2001.  
However, Argentines are not just invested in dollars and pesos, bank accounts 
and cash; they are also invested in their economic past.  As a result, the 
history of Argentine economic life is under a constant process of 
(re)narration, as Argentines reflect upon their rocky economic past in films, 
memoir, comic monologues, and stories told among family and friends.  I follow 
Argentines in attending to the past as a means to engage current ecologies of 
investment, paying particular attention to the history of currency and banking 
in Argentina, which together helped produce a boom in real estate investment in 
the years following the crisis.  I suggest how thinking in this way about 
investments could be useful for looking beyond global descriptions of the 
economy.








Irene Hartford
Sr. Administrative Assistant
MIT Anthropology Program
E53-335, 30 Wadsworth St.
Cambridge, MA 02142
617-452-2837
[email protected]




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