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Performing housing debt attachments: forming semi-financialised subjects

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  • Tomáš Samec

Abstract

This article contributes to the understanding of how first-time buyers and their parents form attachments to housing debt. Interviews, carried out in the Czech Republic, with 40 first-time homebuyers and 10 with their parents were used to identify multiple layers of debt performativity. These layers consist of statements expressing moral evaluations and emotions; calculative and cognitive devices; and references to practices. Two arguments are advanced through a framework of layered performativity. The first argument concerns the subjectivities of debtors. Debtors adopt investment concepts in their statements and use calculative devices. However, by relying on familial moral orders of security and familial financial transfers, these debtors must be regarded rather as semi-financialised subjects. The second argument relates to the re-configuration of social and economic relations in families. Debt attachment endorses the use of intergenerational financial transfers, which in turn may enforce continued intra-familial reciprocity, both in terms of the recipients’ obligation to the providers of a gift or loan as well as concerning an obligation to help their children attain homeownership in the future. Finally, intergenerational transfers also transform the character of the mortgage market and mortgage debt, making informal debts an important part of formal debt circuits.

Suggested Citation

  • Tomáš Samec, 2018. "Performing housing debt attachments: forming semi-financialised subjects," Journal of Cultural Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 11(6), pages 549-564, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:jculte:v:11:y:2018:i:6:p:549-564
    DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2018.1493611
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    Cited by:

    1. Vincent Guermond, 2022. "Contesting the financialisation of remittances: Repertoires of reluctance, refusal and dissent in Ghana and Senegal," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 54(4), pages 800-821, June.
    2. Ariane Agunsoye, 2021. "‘Locked in the Rat Race’: Variegated financial subjectivities in the United Kingdom," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 53(7), pages 1828-1848, October.
    3. David Bissell, 2022. "Affective life of financial loss: Detaching from lost investments in the wake of the gig economy," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 54(3), pages 477-492, May.
    4. Léna Pellandini-Simányi & Adam Banai, 2021. "Reluctant financialisaton: Financialisaton without financialised subjectivities in Hungary and the United States," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 53(4), pages 785-808, June.

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