Wall Street Women
Autor Melissa S. Fisheren Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 iun 2012
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822353454
ISBN-10: 0822353458
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 3 photographs
Dimensiuni: 168 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
ISBN-10: 0822353458
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 3 photographs
Dimensiuni: 168 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Recenzii
"Wall Street Women by Melissa Fisher looks into what its really like to make ones career in the boardrooms of the incorrigible boys club of high finance. Fisher, a visiting scholar at New York Universitys Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, traces 50 years of the personal and professional trajectories of the first generation of women to make it as executives on Wall Street...Fisher shows how women who made it on Wall Street deftly deployed their supposedly innate risk-averse qualities to stay afloat long term." Elizabeth Dwoskin, Bloomsberg Businessweek, July 26th 2012
"Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012
"Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights
"Melissa Fishers Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman
"Georgetown University anthropologist Fisher, co-editor of Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, combines the detached curiosity of an anthropologist studying the folkways of a tribal village with a sure grasp of history, politics, and economics, as well as an affectionate regard for her subjects, a small group of highly successful women who entered Wall Street in the 60s." Publishers Weekly, May 2012
"Wall Street Women by Melissa Fisher looks into what it's really like to make one's career in the boardrooms of the incorrigible boys' club of high finance. Fisher, a visiting scholar at New York University's Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, traces 50 years of the personal and professional trajectories of the first generation of women to make it as executives on Wall Street...Fisher shows how women who made it on Wall Street deftly deployed their supposedly innate risk-averse qualities to stay afloat long term." Elizabeth Dwoskin, Bloomsberg Businessweek, July 26th 2012 "Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012 "Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman "Georgetown University anthropologist Fisher, co-editor of Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, combines the detached curiosity of an anthropologist studying the folkways of a tribal village with a sure grasp of history, politics, and economics, as well as an affectionate regard for her subjects, a small group of highly successful women who entered Wall Street in the '60s." Publishers Weekly, May 2012
"Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman
"Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012 "Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman
"Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012 "Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman "Georgetown University anthropologist Fisher, co-editor of Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, combines the detached curiosity of an anthropologist studying the folkways of a tribal village with a sure grasp of history, politics, and economics, as well as an affectionate regard for her subjects, a small group of highly successful women who entered Wall Street in the '60s." Publishers Weekly, May 2012
"Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012
"Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights
"Melissa Fishers Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman
"Georgetown University anthropologist Fisher, co-editor of Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, combines the detached curiosity of an anthropologist studying the folkways of a tribal village with a sure grasp of history, politics, and economics, as well as an affectionate regard for her subjects, a small group of highly successful women who entered Wall Street in the 60s." Publishers Weekly, May 2012
"Wall Street Women by Melissa Fisher looks into what it's really like to make one's career in the boardrooms of the incorrigible boys' club of high finance. Fisher, a visiting scholar at New York University's Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, traces 50 years of the personal and professional trajectories of the first generation of women to make it as executives on Wall Street...Fisher shows how women who made it on Wall Street deftly deployed their supposedly innate risk-averse qualities to stay afloat long term." Elizabeth Dwoskin, Bloomsberg Businessweek, July 26th 2012 "Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012 "Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman "Georgetown University anthropologist Fisher, co-editor of Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, combines the detached curiosity of an anthropologist studying the folkways of a tribal village with a sure grasp of history, politics, and economics, as well as an affectionate regard for her subjects, a small group of highly successful women who entered Wall Street in the '60s." Publishers Weekly, May 2012
"Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman
"Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012 "Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman
"Extensively researched and thoroughly documented, this portrait of a pioneering generation of women provides context for understanding the emergent discourse of feminizing markets. Strongly recommended for readers interested in business anthropology or gender studies, particularly for gendered discourses of finance and the female financial elite." Rebekah Wallin, Library Journal, June 2012 "Detecting gendering in high finance is a long-standing challenge - it is a domain inhospitable to the main categories of feminist analysis. Melissa Fisher goes at it with gusto and gives us a great book." Saskia Sassen, author of Territory, Authority, Rights "Melissa Fisher's Wall Street Women introduces us to a feminist world that we can hardly imagine. As they dream of changing the hostile domain of finance, women find themselves drawing on traditional notions of gender equality and coaching each other in old-fashioned survival skills. Written in enticing prose, Wall Street Women offers us an illuminating peek into a wholly unexpected fusion of feminism with the market." Alice Kessler-Harris, author of A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman "Georgetown University anthropologist Fisher, co-editor of Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, combines the detached curiosity of an anthropologist studying the folkways of a tribal village with a sure grasp of history, politics, and economics, as well as an affectionate regard for her subjects, a small group of highly successful women who entered Wall Street in the '60s." Publishers Weekly, May 2012
Notă biografică
Cuprins
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Wall Street Women 1
1. Beginnings 27
2. Careers, Networks, and Mentors 66
3. Gendered Discourses of Finance 95
4. Women's Politics and State-Market Feminism 120
5. Life after Wall-Street 136
6. Market Feminism, Feminizing Markets, and the Financial Crisis 155
Notes 175
Bibliography 201
Index 217
Introduction. Wall Street Women 1
1. Beginnings 27
2. Careers, Networks, and Mentors 66
3. Gendered Discourses of Finance 95
4. Women's Politics and State-Market Feminism 120
5. Life after Wall-Street 136
6. Market Feminism, Feminizing Markets, and the Financial Crisis 155
Notes 175
Bibliography 201
Index 217
Descriere
Tells the story of the first generation of women to establish themselves as professionals on Wall Street