The enabling potential of accounting is explored through an investigation of practices attending the rural rehabilitation program in 1930s USA. The paper examines the attempts of a progressive government agency to encourage the adoption of accounting on a substantial scale through 'supervised credit'. This episode is analyzed by reference to concepts of supervision derived from the work of theorists such as Foucault and Giddens. The accounting techniques applied by rural families under supervision are discussed and their rehabilitative impacts assessed at the levels of the objectified population and its individuated subjects. It is shown that accounting featured prominently, at diverse levels of government, in what has been identified as the most significant attempt to address rural poverty in American history. While the educative functioning of supervised accounting had facilitative and enabling effects, its administrative functioning was surveillant, controlling and directing of those targeted for intervention. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
机构:
Bowling Green State Univ, Ray & Pat Browne Popular Culture Lib, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USABowling Green State Univ, Ray & Pat Browne Popular Culture Lib, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA
Browne, Ray B.
JOURNAL OF AMERICAN CULTURE,
2007,
30
(03):
: 376
-
376
机构:
New Jersey Inst Technol, Federated Hist Dept, Newark, NJ 07102 USA
Rutgers State Univ, Newark, NJ 07102 USANew Jersey Inst Technol, Federated Hist Dept, Newark, NJ 07102 USA