In the future, toward death : finance capitalism and security in Don DeLillo's "Cosmopolis"
Johannes Voelz
This article develops a reading of Don DeLillo's novel Cosmopolis that differentiates between two thematic and poetological axes running through the text. On the one hand, Cosmopolis explores the future-fixation of the risk regime of finance capitalism; on the other, it stages scenes of insecurity that physically threaten the protagonist and his world. Insecurity, the article argues, is a condition that throughout the text increasingly gains in appeal because it promises to offer an alternative to a world of managed risk. The concern with security emphasizes finitude and mortality, thus enabling a turn to existential matters that the virtual abstractions of finance have seemingly made inaccessible. While proposing an opposition between a logic of risk based on virtuality and a logic of (in)security based on authenticity, DeLillo's novel also suggests that it is impossible to break out of the logic of risk management pervading late modernity. The appeal of (in)security articulated in Cosmopolis rather lies in the promise to existentially revitalize life within the confines of financialized capitalism.
Year of publication: |
2018
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Authors: | Völz, Johannes |
Published in: |
Finance and society. - Edinburgh : University of Edinburgh, ISSN 2059-5999, ZDB-ID 2893795-8. - Vol. 4.2018, 1, p. 76-91
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Subject: | Don DeLillo | Cosmopolis | security | risk | virtuality | authenticity |
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