The Personal Life of Debt
Coercion, Subjectivity and Inequality in Britain
Abstract
As the cost of living rises, British households face unprecedented levels of debt. But many commentators characterise those who stash away envelopes, leave telephones ringing, or hide from debt collectors as irresponsible.
The first full-length ethnography of debt problems in Britain, this book uses long-term fieldwork on a southern English housing estate to give a sensitive retelling of the everyday lives of indebted people.
It argues that the inequalities of debt go beyond economic questions to include the way state coercion hinders people’s efforts to define what they truly value. Indeed, from finance to housing and even parenthood, the potential for dispossession has become a pervasive method of power that strikes at the heart of personal life.
Keywords
Sociology;Central / national / federal government policies;Social and cultural anthropology;Human geography;Poverty and precarity;Social classesISBN
9781529239416, 9781529239423, 9781529239454, 9781529239430, 9781529239447Publisher
Bristol University PressPublisher website
https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
Bristol, 2025Classification
Sociology and anthropology
Social welfare and social services
Human geography
Poverty and precarity
Social classes
Social and cultural anthropology
Capitalism