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The haptic visuality of financial trading

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  • Deniz Coral

Abstract

This article offers a sideways approach to analyzing market visualizations on trading screens as a part of the sensoryscapes of financial trading. Based on ethnographic research on the trading floor of a market-maker investment bank in Istanbul, I develop an anthropologically driven interdisciplinary lens built on social studies of finance (SSF) and film and media studies. Through this lens, I use ‘haptic’ (Marks, Laura U. 2000. The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and Senses. Duke University Press) as a key analytic and argue that markets on screens generate a haptic visuality that shapes traders’ bodily, sensuous, affective, and emotional engagements with markets. In this way, I offer an alternative reading of Beunza and Stark’s conceptualization of pattern recognition and re-cognition by bringing it back to the works of Knorr Cetina and Bruegger. I show that traders’ aspirations, intuition, and memories take part in pattern recognition and re-cognition, transforming these experiences into subjective and embodied knowledges and practices. Hence, I expand social scientific studies on financial trading by demonstrating that intersubjective relations with anonymous market actors require self-embedding into market visualizations, through which one can engage with the faces of markets as a face that touches back to the haptic visuality of markets on screens.

Suggested Citation

  • Deniz Coral, 2024. "The haptic visuality of financial trading," Journal of Cultural Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 17(5), pages 567-587, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:jculte:v:17:y:2024:i:5:p:567-587
    DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2024.2323690
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