Arts and ChartsMain MenuIntroductionAn Age of PanicsNineteenth Century TrackAn Age of EconomicsTwentieth Century TrackGalleryCreditsDaniel Platt and Rachel Knecht3ebb098c099a4564606054ddd3beb814ce8f359d
"Caught in the Tape"
12017-10-07T07:41:03-07:00Daniel Platt and Rachel Knecht3ebb098c099a4564606054ddd3beb814ce8f359d118621Arthur Burdett Frost, Daily Graphic (1877)plain2017-10-07T07:41:03-07:00Daniel Platt and Rachel Knecht3ebb098c099a4564606054ddd3beb814ce8f359d
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12017-07-19T09:03:18-07:00The Specter of Conspiracy20plain2017-10-07T07:42:14-07:00With the rise of large financial and industrial corporations after the Civil War, many Americans alighted on a new culprit to explain sudden economic crises: corporate conspirators. The notion that behind each economic swing was a conspiring capitalist saturated the political discourse of nineteenth-century America.
Representations of Wall Street as a space of illicit dealings resonated with long-standing American suspicions of secretive organizations corrupting the democratic process. Note the portrayal of the body of the capitalist in many of these images as corpulent and vaguely Jewish. These were familiar signifiers of idleness and predation in the American moral vocabulary, meant to identify financiers and industrialists as beyond the pale of Christian ethics.
The banker's body took other forms as well, Like Beard’s The Bulls and the Bears, Arthur Burdett Frost’s (1877) drew on animal imagery to illustrate how the market operated. It told a very different tale, however, depicting the railroad financier Jay Gould as a bear dragging the bullish investors of Wall Street around by ticker tape. Frost was highlighting not the animal passions that drove the economy but the manipulation of the market by a privileged few.