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首页> 外文期刊>Qualitative Research in Financial Markets >Accounting for play as work in The Expense Account
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Accounting for play as work in The Expense Account

机译:在“费用帐户”中以工作方式入账

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Purpose - This paper aims to examine how and why finance is represented in cultural products. Focussing on an illustration by Norman Rockwell for the cover of The Saturday Evening Post, this analysis suggests that financialization is represented through the technique of visually incongruent humour. Humour relays the cultural value of the separation of work and play, and financialization is a tool to make sense of play as work. Addressing why certain financial representations are produced highlights the influence of finance in determining how and what messages about financialization are made public. This analysis of a single illustration suggests a need for further research into comparative and contextual studies of culture and finance. Design/methodology/approach - This paper is a qualitative analysis of The Expense Account (1957), a cover illustration for The Saturday Evening Post. Findings - In analysing the visually incongruent humour of the illustration, the cultural value of the separation of work and play is muddied by the lack of supervision and undefined organizational space. Freedom of travel and lack of managerial presence suggest that travelling salesmen face anxiety and uncertainty in having to account for their fun activities as work. Accounting is one tool of financialization used to interpret play as work by employees. This illustration was produced in a for-profit context and was therefore influenced by the financial decisions of magazine editors and customers. Practical implications - Interdisciplinary qualitative analysis of finance and humorous popular cultural images suggests that accounting is a financial tool for making sense of play as work outside fixed organizational spaces. Additional support is given for studying popular culture and finance together, as popular culture is produced within a financial system in which financial decisions determine humorous representations of financialization. Originality/value - This paper adopts a financial perspective in examining a Norman Rockwell illustration and makes the case for examining how representations of financialization are made by humour and financial influence
机译:目的-本文旨在研究文化产品中金融的代表方式和原因。着眼于诺曼·罗克韦尔(Norman Rockwell)的《星期六晚邮报》封面插图,该分析表明,金融化是通过视觉上不协调的幽默技术表现出来的。幽默传达了工作与娱乐分离的文化价值,而金融化是一种使游戏具有工作感的工具。解决为什么产生某些财务代表的问题突出了财务在确定如何以及以何种方式公开有关财务化的消息方面的影响。对单个插图的分析表明,有必要对文化和金融的比较和情境研究进行进一步研究。设计/方法/方法-本文是对《费用帐户》(1957年)的定性分析,该帐户是《周六晚上邮报》的封面插图。调查结果-在分析插图的视觉上不一致的幽默时,缺乏监督和不确定的组织空间使工作与娱乐分离的文化价值变得模糊。自由出行和缺乏管理人员的存在表明,旅行推销员在不得不将他们的娱乐活动视为工作时面临焦虑和不确定性。会计是一种金融化工具,用于将员工的工作解释为工作。该插图是在营利性背景下制作的,因此受到杂志编辑和客户财务决策的影响。实际意义-对财务和幽默流行文化意象的跨学科定性分析表明,会计是一种使固定工作空间之外的工作更有意义的财务工具。流行文化是在金融系统中产生的,在该系统中财务决策决定了金融化的幽默表现,因此为共同研究流行文化和金融提供了额外的支持。原创性/价值-本文在研究诺曼·罗克韦尔的插图时采用了财务观点,并提出了如何通过幽默感和财务影响力来表示财务化表示的案例

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