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Paying with plastic: the enduring presence of the credit card

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Paying with plastic: the enduring presence of the credit card. / Deville, Joseph.
Accumulation: the material politics of plastic. ed. / Jennifer Gabrys; Gay Hawkins; Mike Michael. London: Routledge, 2014. (CRESC Culture Economy and the Social).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Deville, J 2014, Paying with plastic: the enduring presence of the credit card. in J Gabrys, G Hawkins & M Michael (eds), Accumulation: the material politics of plastic. CRESC Culture Economy and the Social, Routledge, London. <https://www.routledge.com/products/9780415625821>

APA

Deville, J. (2014). Paying with plastic: the enduring presence of the credit card. In J. Gabrys, G. Hawkins, & M. Michael (Eds.), Accumulation: the material politics of plastic (CRESC Culture Economy and the Social). Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/products/9780415625821

Vancouver

Deville J. Paying with plastic: the enduring presence of the credit card. In Gabrys J, Hawkins G, Michael M, editors, Accumulation: the material politics of plastic. London: Routledge. 2014. (CRESC Culture Economy and the Social).

Author

Deville, Joseph. / Paying with plastic : the enduring presence of the credit card. Accumulation: the material politics of plastic. editor / Jennifer Gabrys ; Gay Hawkins ; Mike Michael. London : Routledge, 2014. (CRESC Culture Economy and the Social).

Bibtex

@inbook{807abcb4249e4e4e8dd3c23038e06cb1,
title = "Paying with plastic: the enduring presence of the credit card",
abstract = "All monetary objects – credit cards as much as bank notes and coins – are material things that can be considered as {\textquoteleft}economic devices{\textquoteright}. The success of the particular transactional object depends on the security and predictability of its relations with a diverse and complex range of associated actors, both human and non-human. Yet monetary devices themselves can shape the course of economic action. This chapter focuses on objects at the {\textquoteleft}frontline{\textquoteright} of many forms of consumer credit enabled economic exchange: the plastic cards that smooth so many people{\textquoteright}s passages through consumer spaces are a recognizable part of our everyday lives. It argues that not enough attention has been paid to how monetary mediums might be important in shaping social and economic life. It focuses on historical emergence of the plastic card in the United States, showing the way in which plastic and its specific socio-material affordances have, in different and changing ways, mattered in the history of the payment card and in creditors{\textquoteright} engagements with users, including playing a key role in accelerating the first major credit card boom. The chapter then moves to the United Kingdom, exploring the role of the card not in moments of borrowing, but at times of default – that is, when consumer credit borrowers, for whatever reason, are unable (or unwilling) to meet their obligations to repay. In these situations, as the chapter shows, the cards themselves can become the targets of micropolitical forms of protest, directing attention towards what usually goes unremarked: that the accumulation of billions of dollars of consumer credit debt not only depends on, but has been stimulated by, the accumulation in so many everyday lives of millions of superficially unremarkable plastic cards.",
keywords = "money, materiality, credit card, default",
author = "Joseph Deville",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780415625821",
series = "CRESC Culture Economy and the Social",
publisher = "Routledge",
editor = "Jennifer Gabrys and Gay Hawkins and Mike Michael",
booktitle = "Accumulation",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Paying with plastic

T2 - the enduring presence of the credit card

AU - Deville, Joseph

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - All monetary objects – credit cards as much as bank notes and coins – are material things that can be considered as ‘economic devices’. The success of the particular transactional object depends on the security and predictability of its relations with a diverse and complex range of associated actors, both human and non-human. Yet monetary devices themselves can shape the course of economic action. This chapter focuses on objects at the ‘frontline’ of many forms of consumer credit enabled economic exchange: the plastic cards that smooth so many people’s passages through consumer spaces are a recognizable part of our everyday lives. It argues that not enough attention has been paid to how monetary mediums might be important in shaping social and economic life. It focuses on historical emergence of the plastic card in the United States, showing the way in which plastic and its specific socio-material affordances have, in different and changing ways, mattered in the history of the payment card and in creditors’ engagements with users, including playing a key role in accelerating the first major credit card boom. The chapter then moves to the United Kingdom, exploring the role of the card not in moments of borrowing, but at times of default – that is, when consumer credit borrowers, for whatever reason, are unable (or unwilling) to meet their obligations to repay. In these situations, as the chapter shows, the cards themselves can become the targets of micropolitical forms of protest, directing attention towards what usually goes unremarked: that the accumulation of billions of dollars of consumer credit debt not only depends on, but has been stimulated by, the accumulation in so many everyday lives of millions of superficially unremarkable plastic cards.

AB - All monetary objects – credit cards as much as bank notes and coins – are material things that can be considered as ‘economic devices’. The success of the particular transactional object depends on the security and predictability of its relations with a diverse and complex range of associated actors, both human and non-human. Yet monetary devices themselves can shape the course of economic action. This chapter focuses on objects at the ‘frontline’ of many forms of consumer credit enabled economic exchange: the plastic cards that smooth so many people’s passages through consumer spaces are a recognizable part of our everyday lives. It argues that not enough attention has been paid to how monetary mediums might be important in shaping social and economic life. It focuses on historical emergence of the plastic card in the United States, showing the way in which plastic and its specific socio-material affordances have, in different and changing ways, mattered in the history of the payment card and in creditors’ engagements with users, including playing a key role in accelerating the first major credit card boom. The chapter then moves to the United Kingdom, exploring the role of the card not in moments of borrowing, but at times of default – that is, when consumer credit borrowers, for whatever reason, are unable (or unwilling) to meet their obligations to repay. In these situations, as the chapter shows, the cards themselves can become the targets of micropolitical forms of protest, directing attention towards what usually goes unremarked: that the accumulation of billions of dollars of consumer credit debt not only depends on, but has been stimulated by, the accumulation in so many everyday lives of millions of superficially unremarkable plastic cards.

KW - money

KW - materiality

KW - credit card

KW - default

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9780415625821

T3 - CRESC Culture Economy and the Social

BT - Accumulation

A2 - Gabrys, Jennifer

A2 - Hawkins, Gay

A2 - Michael, Mike

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -