The Financial Markets: Between Publics and Multitudes. A Sociological Contribution to Markets from Gabriel Tarde’s Viewpoint

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Maria Soledad Sanchez

This paper reflects on the dynamics of today’s financial markets in the light of two concepts — publics and multitudes — which were developed by the sociologist Gabriel Tarde at the end of the 19th Century. Each of the concepts reveals a different way of structuring social links among individuals. We consider that Tarde’s concepts let us: (1) stress the communicative dimension of today’s financial markets, placing currents of opinion at the core of speculative activity in the creation and assignment of value to monetary flows and other financial instruments; (2) hypothesise that financial markets articulate the logic of ‘publics’ (or audiences). These markets are virtually, globally connected, spreading currents of opinion that link financial experts and ordinary folk. They also link the multitudes (giving rise to ‘bubbles’, key social-temporal moments, and e-valuations through community links among professional agents — all features that can pave the way to a crisis).


The paper’s point of departure is a review of present theories on Market Sociology. It then delves into the contributions that the concepts of ‘public’ and ‘multitude’ make in shedding light on financial dynamics and hence on the Sociology of Finance.

Keywords
finance, markets, public, multitude, sociology, Tarde

Article Details

How to Cite
Sanchez, Maria Soledad. “The Financial Markets: Between Publics and Multitudes. A Sociological Contribution to Markets from Gabriel Tarde’s Viewpoint”. Digithum, no. 24, doi:10.7238/d.v0i24.3176.
Author Biography

Maria Soledad Sanchez, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, AR

Sánchez was awarded a PhD in Social Sciences by Universidad de Buenos Aires. She is Assistant Researcher at Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), based at The Institute for Higher Social Studies (IAES), Universidad de San Martín. She is a professor at Universidad de Buenos Aires and at Universidad de San Martín.