An Analysis of the Relationship Between Corporate America and Wall Street in Liquidated by Karen Hos

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In Karen Hos’ Liquidated, she aims to study the relationships between corporate America and the worlds greatest financial center. . . Wall Street. She puts all her three years of research in her ethnography and thus the very first page of chapter one, we can already understand Hos’ determination to understand what Wall Street is all about. The first main theme explained is the relations in Wall Street that are based on a culture of domination of staff members, their irresponsibility dealing with corporate America, and constant changes that occur during this process. Another major theme we see in her ethnography is that Wall Street, first used for the communities wellbeing, is now profit oriented.
Recruitment is the very first part of becoming an investment banker. The typical profile of these new recruits are very privileged, elite university graduates who are primarily Euro-American. Although there are some African Americans, Asian Americans, and women found in Wall Street; Ho sees that the higher you climb, the less diverse it tends to get (Ho, 78). Firms pull from 5-10 of the most elite universities such as Harvard, Stanford, Yale, and so on and it is these new recruits that are seen as the best and the brightest with the most “smartness”. Part of this has to do with the fact that a persons pedigree is seen to legitimate how that investor will do in the market. New recruits that are fresh out of college are expected to hold the future of corporate America in their hands even if they do not have much real world experience straight out of college. When it comes to social status in Wall Streets’ elite community, it is these great pedigrees that are the ones smiled upon. “They are the elite of Wall Street. Their offices are furn...

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...mless and consists of much boasting and proudness. This is a metaphor for corporate America. With much pride and dignity can Wall Street run seamlessly, but there are many problems. They do not care about the future America, like this tribe cares about their future sailors. That is why they build such a strong canoe, to accommodate them. Investment bankers today are not interested in building a stronger economy, they are interested in the most profit boosting short term answers (Ho, 154). Just worrying about their next big bonus than small businesses or mortgages. The ritual that Malinowski describes the tribal people in participating to celebrate this new canoe, can also be seen as the ritual to celebrate a new recruit member becoming a banking investor. Both new canoe and recruit are seen as perfect and hold the future of either the tribe or a corporate America.

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