65 results on '"Pawnbroker"'
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2. Introduction: Fair Price and Sufficient Profit
- Author
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McMahon, Craig, Coffman, D'Maris, Series Editor, Moore, Tony K., Series Editor, Allen, Martin, Series Editor, Reinert, Sophus, Series Editor, and McMahon, Craig
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- 2021
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3. The Global Financial Crisis and China’s Pawnbroking Industry
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Jiang, Chunxia, Yao, Shujie, Yao, Shujie, Series editor, Tsang, Steve, Series editor, and Jiang, Chunxia
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- 2017
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4. Ester, a Missing Clasp, and Jewish Pawnbroking Networks in Renaissance Prague
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Anna Parker
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History ,Judaism ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,people.profession ,The Renaissance ,Ancient history ,Quarter (United States coin) ,050701 cultural studies ,0506 political science ,Diaspora ,Pawnbroker ,050602 political science & public administration ,Criminal court ,Commonwealth ,people - Abstract
In 1577, a petty pawnbroker named Ester lost a clasp belonging to a Prague noblewoman, Lady Juliana the Fifth. Having been traded repeatedly between anonymous pawnbrokers, the clasp was eventually tracked down in the Polish city of Poznań, by which time Ester had already fled Prague and taken refuge in Cracow. In this essay, I use the subsequent criminal court case to explore this illuminating episode in the history of the city's Jewish Quarter. Taking place in the late Renaissance, during what has often been referred to as the Jewish “Golden Age,” I argue that this dramatic event provides access to the realities of an era often characterized as harmonious. I position pawnbroking as an industry that invited intimate and regular cross-confessional contact, and one that therefore offers up new opportunities to consider the nature of coexistence. By following the movement of both Ester and the pawned clasp from Prague to Poland, I also show how attention to pawnbroking can illuminate a constellation of transregional connections that stretched from Bohemia to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to its east, revealing the otherwise unrecorded ways in which Prague's Jews were connected to the Ashkenazi diaspora.
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- 2021
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5. RCF model of Indian Bank for micro credit
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Dasgupta, Rajaram, Malai, Manickaraj, and Khurshed, Arif
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- 2013
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6. Eksistensi Hak Gadai Tanah Sawah di Desa Ubung Kecamatan Jonggat Kabupaten Lombok Tengah Nusa Tenggara Barat
- Author
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Ida Ayu Putu Widiati, I Wayan Arthanaya, and I Made Adi Karsa
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Agrarian law ,Agrarian society ,Agricultural land ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Pawnbroker ,Socialization (Marxism) ,people.profession ,people ,business ,Agricultural economics ,Empirical research methods - Abstract
The issuance of Law Number 5 of 1960 concerning Basic Regulations on Agrarian Principles on September 24, 1960, then abolished the old agrarian law. The purpose of this study is to analyze the implementation of land pawns in the Ubung village, Jonggat sub-district and find out the inhibiting factors of the implementation of agricultural land pawns in Ubung Village, Jonggat District, Central Lombok Regency, West Nusa Tenggara based on Law No. 56 Prp of 1960. The method in this study is Empirical research methods and problem approaches using legal sociology. The results showed that the agricultural land pawn given by the pawnbroker and the pawn recipient was not in accordance with the law. Agricultural pawn in the community of Ubung Village, Jonggat Subdistrict, Central Lombok Regency is not in line with the agricultural land pawning regulated in Law Number 56 Prp of 1960. Factors that inhibit the implementation of agricultural pawn in Ubung Village, Jonggat Subdistrict, Central Lombok Regency NTB based on article 7 paragraph (1) and paragraph (2) of Law Number 56 Prp of 1960 ineffective are a) there has been no socialization of Law Number 56 prp of 1960 governing the problem of pawning agricultural land in Ubung Village, Jonggat District, Central Lombok Regency, NTB from the authorities. b) The culture of Ubung Village, Jonggat Subdistrict, Central Lombok Regency, NTB, which considers the provisions of Law Number 56 prp of 1960 to be incompatible with the customs contained in their environment.
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- 2020
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7. Fettes, Pawnbroker's Pledge Book
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Beverly Lemire
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Pawnbroker ,Political science ,people.profession ,Theology ,people ,Pledge - Published
- 2021
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8. Pawn Execution to PT Pegadaian against Collateral Object Which Does Not Belong to the Pawner
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Syofiarti Syofiarti, Afdela Yunita, and Busyra Azheri
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procedure ,Property (philosophy) ,pawnshop ,execution ,Collateral ,collateral ,people.profession ,Object (philosophy) ,lcsh:Social Sciences ,lcsh:H ,Loan ,Pawnbroker ,Private property ,pawn ,Default ,lcsh:H1-99 ,Settlement (trust) ,Business ,lcsh:Social sciences (General) ,people ,Law and economics - Abstract
The problems raised here include: the first is the procedure for binding collateral to PT Pegadaian (Persero) which object does not belong to the pawner. The second is about how the auction will be carried out at the execution of a pawn to PT Pegadaian (Persero) against a collateral object that does not belong to the pawner. The third is about how the legal protection against the owner of pawn collateral object in the implementation of an auction of pawn execution. This study applies an empirical juridical method with the nature of descriptive analysis. It utilizes primary data and secondary data. The results of the study showed that the provisions of Article 1152 of the Civil Code provide the possibility that the object pawned for collateral for debt do not have to be movable property of private property, but can also be movable property belonging to others. The procedure for binding collateral object that does not belong to the pawner is the same as binding the collateral object legally as evidenced by a Loan Proof Letter. Thus, everyone who comes to PT Pegadaian with the aim of borrowing money must carry collateral items by attaching a Personal Identity Card. The auction will continue when the pawner defaults on the agreement in accordance with the provisions in the Loan Proof Letter. Legal protection, for the auction of a pawn object, for the owner of a pawn collateral object is actually given by law; i.e. if it is proven that the pawnbroker receives a pawn in bad intention, the pawnbroker party is obliged to return the pawned obejct to the real owner. In the settlement of this case, the claim from the owner of the actual collateral object to PT Pegadaian was not granted because the real owner did not receive legal protection.
- Published
- 2019
9. Conclusion: Perceptions Matter
- Author
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Craig McMahon
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Financial inclusion ,Poverty ,Working poor ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Capitalism ,State (polity) ,restrict ,Loan ,Pawnbroker ,Development economics ,Business ,people ,media_common - Abstract
Affordable credit remains out of reach for many low-income households. Industry supporters have long argued that small loans serve borrowers overlooked by other financial institutions. Still, reformers have not let them cast off the predatory loan shark moniker. The core issue is little debated: poor people face a near-permanent shortage of money. The motivations to restrict the working poor’s access to high-cost credit have varied dramatically. Research reports and studies arrive at differing conclusions. Passionate spirits motivated a protective ethic. The entangled relationship between capitalism, poverty and the state’s response is complex. Since the private markets will continue to innovate, and the demand for loans will likely remain, applying some lessons from history can inform policymakers seeking economic fairness for the poor and vulnerable.
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- 2021
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10. 2 Silent Screams: Representing Trauma and Grief in The Pawnbroker and The Leftovers
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Brian E. Crim
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Psychoanalysis ,Pawnbroker ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Grief ,Psychology ,people ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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11. 30. The Pawnbroker’s Shop
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Charles Dickens
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Pawnbroker ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art history ,people.profession ,Art ,people ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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12. Screen Memories: Trauma, Repetition, and Survival in Sidney Lumet’s The Pawnbroker
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Sandor Goodhart
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Hollywood ,History ,Repetition (rhetorical device) ,business.industry ,people.profession ,Art history ,Liberal democracy ,Movie theater ,The Holocaust ,Pawnbroker ,Icon ,business ,people ,computer ,Period (music) ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Sidney Lumet’s Hollywood production of The Pawnbroker in the early sixties based upon a novel of the same name (and released during the same period the Eichmann trial gained traction in Europe and Israel) significantly exceeded films of the preceding decade in America where the Holocaust was commonly presented more swiftly and obliquely. Few historians of the treatment of the Holocaust in American cinema would deny its endurance as an icon of America’s engagement with the European past. This chapter argues that Lumet’s post war “screening of the Holocaust” acquires a new depth and urgency today in the post 9/11 era where liberal democracy would once again appear trumped (if not entirely banished) by private devastations and shifting local and global cultural alignments.
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- 2020
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13. Jurgen and the Arthurian legend
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Arturo Rodríguez López-Abadía
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Literature ,Magic (illusion) ,Poetry ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,James Branch Cabell ,people.profession ,Art ,Legend ,Comedy ,Adventure ,Fantastic literature ,Pawnbroker ,Jurgen ,Justice (virtue) ,Arthurian legend ,people ,business ,Period (music) ,media_common - Abstract
Jurgen, a comedy of justice, by James Branch Cabell is one of the most classical pieces of American fantastic literature and has inspired many writers, especially Terry Pratchett, that follows the idea of parodying medieval-inspired countries with a touch of magic, displayed mostly for laughs. Jurgen tells the story of a pawnbroker/poet that one day makes the Devil a favour and the Devil, grateful, grants him for a period of one year the possibility of returning to his youthful self to enjoy life and have love adventures. In the fantasy-medieval land where he lives, the Arthurian legend is real, and he will encounter the great characters such as Guinevere or Anaitis, the Lady of the Lake and have love affairs with every single one of them. But, at the end of this period, he returns home with some material for his poetry and to the normal life of a miserable married man.
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- 2018
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14. Payday-loan bans: evidence of indirect effects on supply
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Stefanie R. Ramirez
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Statistics and Probability ,Macroeconomics ,Economics and Econometrics ,05 social sciences ,people.profession ,Financial system ,Monetary economics ,Supply side ,Seemingly unrelated regressions ,Mathematics (miscellaneous) ,Loan ,Pawnbroker ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Business ,050207 economics ,people ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
In November 2008, Ohio enacted the Short-Term Loan Law which imposed at 28-percent APR on payday loans, effectively banning the industry. Using licensing records from 2006 to 2010, I examine if there are changes in the supply-side of the pawnbroker, precious metals, small-loan, and second-mortgage lending industries during periods when the ban is effective. Seemingly-unrelated regressions results show the ban increases the average county-level operating small-loan, second-mortgage, and pawnbroker licensees per million by 156, 43, and 97 percent, respectively.
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- 2018
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15. The 1923 catastrophic earthquake, 1927 financial disaster and the new Bank Act, 1923–1927.
- Author
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Tamaki, Norio
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The Great Earthquake of 1923, metropolitan banks in ruin, 1923–1926 On 1 September 1923, at 11.58 a.m., a severe earthquake of 7.9 on the Richter scale hit the Pacific coast of Japan at Tokyo Bay in the area known as the southern Kanto district. This was the Great Kanto Earthquake, the most serious natural disaster ever to fall on Japan. The number of people affected was 3.4 million, of whom more than a hundred thousand died out of a total Kanto population of 11.8 million. Deaths were particularly heavy in Tokyo and Yokohama, which accounted for 65 per cent and 32 per cent of the dead and for 82 per cent and 17 per cent of the missing respectively. The government later estimated the aggregate amount of assets destroyed to be ¥4,570 million, which was 38 per cent of the national income of 1923. More than a third of these were burnt to ashes in the Great Earthquake. The disastrous earthquake had major consequences for the Japanese banking system. On the day of the Great Earthquake, there were 542 bank offices in Tokyo comprised of 168 head offices and 374 branches, of which 285 offices, or 63 per cent, were burnt down. In Yokohama, where most of the banking offices in Kanagawa prefecture were concentrated, all forty-two offices, save for the Specie Bank head office, disappeared completely. In Tokyo, of the eighty-four member banks of the Tokyo Bank Association there survived only eight banks without serious damage including the head offices of the Hypotech Bank, Industrial Bank and Mitsubishi and the Tokyo branches of the Specie Bank, Bank of Taiwan and Sumitomo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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16. The origins of ordinary banking: another bank mania, 1875–1881.
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Tamaki, Norio
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Private banking: adaptable ryogae, 1875–1881 The 1876 revisions of the National Bank Decree allowed would-be bankers to use the title ‘bank’, but it was only Mitsui who could immediately take this opportunity to establish themselves as a western-style modern bank. As was seen, Mitsui had earlier in 1872 planned to set up their own bank but were persuaded to support the government scheme of bringing about the national bank system. In addition to this earlier willingness, there was another reason for Mitsui to make efforts to renew their proposal. When it was established, the First National Bank was accommodated in premises specially built by Mitsui for their own banking purposes. As has already been explained,1 Mitsui had unwillingly joined the house of Ono in launching the First National Bank. When at the end of 1874 the house of Ono collapsed, Mitsui considered its position. Mitsui wrote to Shibusawa, chief auditor of the First Bank, detailing fifteen complaints including their shareholdings, use of Mitsui premises as the First Bank offices and withdrawal of bank clerks who had been Mitsui employees. Shibusawa, who was intending to take over the management of the Bank, remained unmoved, rejecting most of the complaints and concluding: As far as the institution [First Bank] has been established carrying ‘the bank’ as its title, I think that the issue department [for the Ministry of Finance] would not ignore the fact that Mitsui Gumi have treated the Bank as their branch shop. As the situation might be considered to cause certain inconveniences, the Bank should, I think, be put in a position free from such shortcomings when the revisions of the National Bank Decree would be made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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17. THE RELIC AND THE RUIN: EQUIVOCAL OBJECTS AND THE PRESENCE OF THE PAST INDANIEL DERONDA
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Priyanka Anne Jacob
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Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Judaism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Taste (sociology) ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,people.profession ,Art history ,06 humanities and the arts ,Art ,060202 literary studies ,050701 cultural studies ,Brother ,Object (philosophy) ,Archaeology ,Placard ,Protestantism ,Pawnbroker ,0602 languages and literature ,Shopkeeper ,people ,media_common - Abstract
Early in George Eliot'sDaniel Deronda, Daniel's life is set on a decisive new path by his fleeting attraction to an object in a shop window. He is turning into a side street off Holburn Road when:his attention was caught by some fine old clasps in chased silver displayed in the window at his right hand. His first thought was that [his aunt] Lady Mallinger, who had a strictly Protestant taste for such Catholic spoils, might like to have these missal-clasps turned into a bracelet; then his eyes travelled over the other contents of the window, and he saw that the shop was that kind of pawnbroker's where the lead is given to jewellery, lace, and all equivocal objects introduced asbric-a-brac. A placard in one corner announced –Watches and Jewellery exchanged and repaired. (344; bk. 4, ch. 6)Daniel then moves across the street to avoid the shopkeeper, and it is only from this new vantage point that he notices the name “Ezra Cohen” above the window – the name he's been seeking while wandering Jewish neighborhoods in London in the hopes of reuniting his protégée Mirah with her family. He will return to the pawnshop later and become acquainted with the Cohens, eventually finding through them his mentor and Mirah's actual brother, Mordecai. Although some discussion of the silver clasps ensues, they are neither purchased nor used in the space of the novel. Still, this seemingly inconsequential trinket proves to have a long history, one that raises questions about the lingering remains of the past, the equivocality of the object, and the dispossessions that hauntDaniel Deronda.
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- 2016
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18. On Not Showing Dostoevskii’s Work: Robert Bresson’s Pickpocket
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Hasty, Olga Peters, author
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- 2016
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19. The poor in England 1700–1850
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Steven King and Alannah Tomkins
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History ,Poverty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Vestry ,Urban poor ,Poor relief ,Game of chance ,Economy ,Pawnbroker ,Political economy ,Kinship ,people ,Welfare ,media_common - Abstract
"Not by bread only"? Common right, parish relief and endowed charity in a forest economy, 1600-1800, Steve Hindle the economy of makeshifts and the poor law - a game of chance? Margaret Hanly "Agents in their own concerns"? Charity and the economy of makeshifts in 18th-century Britain, Sarah Lloyd crime, criminal networks and the survival strategies of the poor in early 18th-century London, Heather Shore pawnbroking and the survival strategies of the urban poor in 1770s York, Alannah Tomkins kinship, poor relief and the welfare process in early modern England, Sam Barrett making the most of opportunity - the economy of makeshifts in the early modern north, Steve King.
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- 2018
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20. The Influence of the Pawnbroker’s Shop Appeared in the Korean and Japanese Modern/Contemporary Literature on the Meaning of Life History
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Shin Yun Ju
- Subjects
History ,Aesthetics ,Pawnbroker ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Capitalism ,Life history ,people ,Meaning of life ,media_common - Published
- 2015
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21. The Discourse of Alternative Credit: A Multimodal Critical Examination of the Cash Converters Mobile App
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Gavin Brookes and Kevin Harvey
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060201 languages & linguistics ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Mobile apps ,people.profession ,050801 communication & media studies ,06 humanities and the arts ,Service provider ,Cheque ,Critical examination ,0508 media and communications ,Pawnbroker ,Cash ,0602 languages and literature ,Financial crisis ,Business ,Marketing ,people ,Financial services ,media_common - Abstract
Following the 2007/2008 Global Financial Crisis, recent times have seen the continuing rise of high interest, so-called fringe economy financial services, including payday lenders, cheque cashing services and pawnbrokers. In this chapter, Brookes and Harvey critically examine the mobile app of the world’s largest pawnbroker, Cash Converters, exposing the subtle but powerful multi-semiotic techniques through which this fringe economy service provider promotes its high interest services to the credit poor. All told, their analysis emphasises the utility of a critical multimodal approach for exposing how the discourse surrounding fringe economy services targets the needy and vulnerable.
- Published
- 2017
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22. ANALYSIS OF PAWNBROKER AGENCIES ACTIVITIES IN UKRAINE
- Author
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І. Tarlopov
- Subjects
Pawnbroker ,people.profession ,Business ,Public administration ,people - Published
- 2019
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23. Stigmatized Labour: An Overlooked Service Worker's Stress
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Simon J Pervan and Liliana L. Bove
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Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Social work ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Identity (social science) ,people.profession ,Stigma (botany) ,Burnout ,050105 experimental psychology ,Service worker ,Feeling ,Pawnbroker ,0502 economics and business ,Stress (linguistics) ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,people ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Abstract
Service workers like social workers are valuable to society ( LeCroy and Stinson, 2004 ), even noble and heroic ( Ashforth et al., 2007 ), yet, perversely, they are often socially stigmatized, seen as “dirty” by their communities because they deal with “tainted” people ( Ashforth and Kreiner, 1999 ). Other service workers also suffer stigmatization because their role is associated with effluent (e.g., refuse collector), they have a servile relationship with others (e.g., housekeeper), or adopt tasks that are perceived as amoral (e.g., pawnbroker) or intrusive (e.g., telemarketer). We propose that feelings of stigma lead to poor well-being and present a conceptual model which introduces the concept of “stigmatized labour” as a type of role stress. We postulate that excessive stigmatized labour (the cognitive and behavioural practices adopted by service workers to protect themselves from feelings of stigma) leads to burnout as service workers’ limited resources are exhausted to deal with the stress ( Hobfoll, 2001 ).
- Published
- 2013
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24. RCF model of Indian Bank for micro credit
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Rajaram Dasgupta and Manickaraj Malai
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Finance ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,people.profession ,Sample (statistics) ,Commercial bank ,Business model ,Micro finance ,Credit history ,Loan ,Pawnbroker ,Economics ,Micro credit ,Business and International Management ,business ,people ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance - Abstract
PurposeIndian Bank, a major commercial bank in South India, has launched Rural Credit Franchisee (RCF) model for lending money to small borrowers in villages. The study aims to study the business model, the profile of ultimate borrowers and their credit requirements and to study the economics of the model.Design/methodology/approachData used for the study are mostly primary in nature collected from the RCFs and the rural borrowers. In addition, bank officials were interviewed and also data on loan accounts of RCFs were collected from the sample bank branches and the RCFs.FindingsThe RCF scheme is a novel micro finance scheme and it has showcased that the informal institutions can be linked with the formal credit institutions. The scheme has benefited all the stakeholders including the bank, the RCFs and the rural poor.Research limitations/implicationsThe study has covered majority of the RCFs of the bank in terms of number and volume of business under the scheme and hence the results indicate the performance of the entire portfolio of the bank under the scheme.Practical implicationsThe study finds that the scheme has benefited all the stakeholders. It has particularly helped in creating competition amongst the rural moneylenders and thereby bringing down the cost of credit in rural hinterlands. Findings are strongly in favour of expanding/replicating the model by the other commercial banks and in all parts of the country, rather across the entire world.Originality/valueThe RCF model is one of its kind and the policy makers and regulators may encourage the scheme in order to attain inclusive economic growth. This is a first of its kind study investigating the operation of such a model.
- Published
- 2013
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25. 'False Veins Under the Skin': Does Edward Lewis Wallant’s The Pawnbroker Fail as Holocaust Fiction?
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Lucyna Aleksandrovicz-Pedich and Jacek Partyka
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Literature ,The Holocaust ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pawnbroker ,people.profession ,Art ,business ,people ,media_common - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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26. An experiment in banking the poor: the Irish Mont-de-Piété, c. 1830–1850
- Author
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Eoin McLaughlin
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History ,Mont-de-Piété ,economic history ,media_common.quotation_subject ,pawnbroking ,people.profession ,Social Welfare ,language.human_language ,Economies of scale ,Interest rate ,Irish ,Loan ,Political economy ,Capital (economics) ,Pawnbroker ,language ,Business ,people ,Monopoly ,Ireland ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
Continental pawnbroking institutions, Monts-de-Piété, were introduced in Ireland in the 1830s and 1840s but did not establish a permanent status. Irish social reformers believed that a Mont-de-Piété system would reduce the cost of borrowing for the poor and also fund a social welfare network, thus negating the need for an Irish Poor Law. This article explores the introduction of the Mont-de-Piété charitable pawnbroker in Ireland and outlines some reasons for its failure. It uses the market incumbents, private pawnbrokers, as a base group in a comparative study and asks why the Monts-de-Piété were the unsuccessful ones of the two. The article finds that the public nature and monopoly status of Monts-de-Piété on the Continent realised economies of scale and gave preferential interest rates on capital, as well as enabling the Mont-de-Piété loan book to be cross-subsidised. These conditions were not replicated in Ireland, hence the failure of the Monts-de-Piété there.
- Published
- 2012
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27. In Hock: Pawning in America from Independence through the Great Depression (review)
- Author
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Jane Kamensky
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Cultural Studies ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Quarter (United States coin) ,Making-of ,Independence ,Explication ,Law ,Pawnbroker ,Great Depression ,Economic history ,Social history ,Famine ,Sociology ,people ,media_common - Abstract
In Hock: Pazvning in America from Independence through the Great Depression. By Wendy Woloson. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010. Pp. 233. Cloth, $35.00.)Reviewed by Jane KamenskyWe are all in hock now, Wendy Woloson points out in the final chapter of this deeply researched and lucidly written study of pawnbrokerage in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century America. Having feasted for decades on credit-card debt - "pawning's mirror opposite" (182) - many Americans now find themselves in famine, pawning consumer goods bought dear with plastic for a little cash loaned at equally high interest rates. Long on the downswing, pawning is making a comeback: The number of pawnshops in the United States has nearly doubled since 1988. Surely the time is ripe for Woloson's probing history of the pawnshop seen from both sides of the counter and many other angles of vision as well. Using an enormous variety of evidence, including business records, personal documents, trade cards, satiric prints, sheet music, dime novels, penny papers, and much more, In Hock redeems pawnbrokerage from stereotypes that have haunted the trade since its inception. Woloson reveals instead a vibrant and complex facet of the emerging industrial economy in cities ranging from Boston to Birmingham to Leadville, Colorado. At its best, Woloson's study makes a worthy companion to Stephen Mihm's A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States (Cambridge, MA, 2007), Seth Rockman's Scraping By: Wage Labor, Slavery, and Survival in Early Baltimore (Baltimore, 2010; reviewed earlier in this issue), and other recent books probing the murky interstices of early American capitalism.Woloson opens In Hock with a visit to her neighborhood pawnshop, the bright and cheerful McGarry's, a family business serving Philadelphians for two generations. "The place is neat and clean," she writes, "the atmosphere relaxed and friendly. The radio is tuned to NPR" (1). Pawnbrokers aren't who we think they are, in other words. Bankers, rescuers, and retailers by turns, they're a far cry from the seedy lowlifes of popular imagination. Primetime stereotypes don't get the pawners right, either, Woloson discovered. She herself pawned a gold necklace for $40.00 - another $6.00 due in five months if she wants to redeem it - all in the service of explaining to her reader the basic terms of the strange trade that is her subject.The reductive stereotypes Woloson wants so badly to dispel are the subject of her second chapter. The caricature of the pawnbroker as a rapacious and marginal figure and his customers as impoverished victims is an old one, arriving in British North America in the mid eighteenth century, before pawnbrokerage itself took root. Stories and images printed in London and reprinted in the colonies beginning in the 1 760s made pawnbrokers "anathema to the emerging capitalist system" (22). Cast as greedy, irrational foreigners (often Jews), pawnbrokers were merchants gone through the looking glass: They took goods and gave money with strings attached, doubly impeding their customers' pursuits of happiness. Woloson marshals mountains of evidence on this point, and her readings of these cultural texts are nuanced and persuasive. But starting the book with a lengthy explication of the stereotypes she wishes to dispel works against her agenda. She devotes nearly a quarter of In Hock to documenting what the pawnbroker was not.Far more revealing are the tour de force middle chapters of In Hock, which offer a painstaking social history of pawning from the perspectives of brokers, clients, and police. In America as in Europe, pawnbrokers followed immigrants to cities, where new kinds of lending arose to meet the needs of newly arrived populations. …
- Published
- 2011
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28. Pawnshops Regulatory Environment: A Readability Analysis
- Author
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Geralyn M. Miller, Hui Di, and Steven A. Hanke
- Subjects
Service (business) ,State (polity) ,Graduate students ,business.industry ,Pawnbroker ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Accounting ,Business ,people ,Reading level ,Readability ,media_common - Abstract
The pawn industry in the United States grew substantially in recent years; however, there is limited research on the regulatory environment for these predominately small businesses. Our study focuses on the readability of state regulations for pawnshops. We select credit unions as a comparison group since they also service non-bank customers. Our analysis reveals that the majority of states’ pawnbroker regulations are at the college reading level while the regulations for credit unions are at the college graduate reading level. There are also geographical differences in the readability of pawnshop regulations with the regulations in the northeast region being easier to read than in the west region. However, there is no evidence that the regulations readability level corresponds to the number of pawnbrokers in a state or to more broad-based measures of state-level business friendliness.
- Published
- 2018
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29. Bringing the Psychological Past into the Physical Present: The Formal and Narrative Emergence of Traumatic Memory in Sidney Lumet’s The Pawnbroker
- Author
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Jeremy Maron
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Psychoanalysis ,Sociology and Political Science ,Communication ,people.profession ,Traumatic memories ,Psyche ,Cultural analysis ,The Holocaust ,Pawnbroker ,Realm ,Narrative ,Sociology ,Theology ,people - Abstract
This article argues that temporal conflation is central to the traumatic legacy left by the Holocaust on Sol Nazerman, a survivor and central figure in Sidney Lumet’s The Pawnbroker (1965). While the film’s juxtaposition of Holocaust-era Europe and 1960s Harlem may invite comparative cultural analysis of these two sites, its consideration of trauma functions through its treatment of time rather than space. By combining stylistic devices such as graphic matches and flashbacks with a narrative focused on the re-emergence of unwanted memories, Lumet’s film emphasises the collapse between Nazerman’s Holocaust past — which he strives to keep at bay in his psyche — and his present in Harlem as the essential catalyst for traumatic return. This return manifests itself as Nazennan’s memories progress — via both formal and narrative techniques — from the partially-repressed realm of his psyche into the physicality of his present.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Shop of Curiosities: Henry James, 'the Jew,' and the Production of Value
- Author
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Sharon B. Oster
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Literature ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Judaism ,people.profession ,Ambivalence ,Aesthetics ,Pawnbroker ,Production (economics) ,Gift economy ,Sociology ,Liminality ,business ,people ,Nexus (standard) ,media_common - Abstract
This essay breaks the critical impasse regarding Henry James’s ambivalence toward “the Jew” in his late works, by rethinking this figure through the logic of cosmopolitan detachment, diasporic mobility, and the gift economy. It traces how social and economic exchange enacted by liminal characters produces dynamic, contingent forms of value (economic, aesthetic, social, moral), and exposes concealed links between sacred and secular economies. Specifically, James redeems the avaricious Jewish pawnbroker who, both central and marginal, best captures the position of the modern cosmopolitan writer at the nexus of capitalist and gift exchange.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. In Hock: Pawning in Early America
- Author
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Wendy A. Woloson
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Informal sector ,Collateral ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Scarcity ,Economy ,Loan ,Currency ,Pawnbroker ,Cash ,Capital (economics) ,Economics ,Economic history ,people ,media_common - Abstract
In a 1782 letter, Robert Morris broke the bad news to Richard Butler, a colonel in the Continental army, that he couldn't loan him any money. "Mortifying as it is," Morris confided, because of the scarcity of cash "the Jew Brokers and others have informed me in the course of my inquiries that Sub Rosa they frequently get 5 per Cent per month from good Substantial men for the use of Money with pledges lodged for the repayment." He added that, "before the establishment of the Bank [of North America] they frequently got ten per Cent and upwards."1Yet Morris's "Substantial men" were not the only ones who found themselves in financial straits. The less economically able-whose capital rested in material possessions rather than large-scale commercial enterprises-also obtained loans by pawning goods, offering up more modest forms of capital as loan collateral. Part of the informal economy of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, pawning was something people resorted to when they needed cash but didn't have it, when tax bills came due or accounts had to be settled by something other than paper currency. Neighbors often offered a horse, plow, or similar piece of capital as collateral in exchange for a short-term loan. Innkeepers, who had ready cash and access to a diverse and mobile clientele traveling with all manner of personal belongings, also became de facto pawnbrokers in the eighteenth century.2While the ability to secure small, short-term cash loans by pawning personal goods was an important economic survival strategy for early Americans, it was a practice that has been largely overlooked by scholars, who have typically aimed their sights on the more visible (and legitimized) economic activities of merchants, retailers, and farmers. But pawning, which began as one among many kinds of informal (and often undocumented) transactions in the early American economy, became, by the nineteenth century, an essential way for the middling sort to obtain short-term loans.3It is tempting to describe pawning as a "marginal" activity. Certainly the pawnbroker appeared to be a marginal figure operating on the fringes of urban areas. And his customers, unconnected to the credit economies of the merchant elite and constantly living on the financial margins, needed someone like the pawnbroker. Pawning, in fact, was anything but marginal. It constituted an essential way to obtain ready cash for everyone but the privileged few, and was therefore a mainstream economic activity. The small, short-term cash loans provided by the pawnbroker supplemented laborers' insufficient wages, buttressing the industrial capitalist system within which they operated. Yet a specious distinction separating the "marginal" from the "mainstream," drawn in their own interests by the early republic's privileged and wealthy (the ones who did not want to acknowledge the inequities of the early American capitalist economy) then held sway, and continues to shape scholarly analysis.An appreciation of the shifting nature of pawning and pawnbroking in America from the late eighteenth century to the antebellum era requires an understanding of the workings of the process and the roles played by the main actors: the pawners and the pawnbrokers who participated in the transactions, and their critics, whose increasing anxiety about pawning reflected broader anxieties about the emergent capitalist system and its effects on their notions of traditional American society.The first reference to pawnbrokers in America complained that they enabled people to waste money. The Minutes of the Court of Burgomasters and Schepens, regarding Dutch settlers in 1657, documented concerns brought to the magistrates of the New Netherland colony "against the many tapsters and tavernkeepers" who profited from money that drinkers should have instead been spending on their families. Moreover, when their customers' cash was gone, the offending proprietors accepted furniture, clothing, and other goods in pawn, enabling their clientele to "obtain the means of continuing their usual drinking bouts. …
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Emergency Hand Loan : A Product Design Case Study
- Author
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International Finance Corporation
- Subjects
CONSUMER CHOICE ,REPAYMENT RATES ,LOAN DATA ,MONEY MANAGEMENT ,EMPLOYERS ,EMERGENCY FINANCING ,EXCHANGE RATES ,CREDIT CARD ,INFORMAL LENDERS ,PAWNBROKERS ,BENEFICIARIES ,INCOME ,REPAYMENT RATE ,FINANCIAL COMPANY ,BANK CUSTOMER ,COLLATERAL ,COLLATERAL REQUIREMENT ,CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP ,CASH SHORTAGES ,EMERGENCY LOANS ,EMERGENCY FUNDS ,BASIC NEEDS ,HIGH INTEREST RATES ,MFI ,INTEREST PAYMENT ,TUITION ,INCOMES ,LOAN PRODUCT ,BORROWER ,HOLDING ,REMITTANCE ,ACCESSIBLE LOAN ,MONEYLENDERS ,MOBILE PHONES ,REPUTATION ,CASE OF DEFAULT ,CASH SHORTAGE ,FINANCE SERVICES ,FINANCIAL COST ,MARKET VALUE ,NEW PRODUCTS ,LOCAL MONEYLENDERS ,INFORMATION SYSTEM ,LOAN RECOVERY ,SOURCES OF FINANCE ,APPROVAL PROCESS ,DISBURSEMENT ,LIQUIDITY ,INTEREST RATES ,PENALTY ,DEBT ,CREDIT LINE ,SEES ,CREDIT OPTIONS ,FORMAL FINANCIAL SERVICE ,LOAN AMOUNTS ,LOAN REPAYMENT ,FINANCIAL SERVICES ,MFIS ,DEBTS ,CASH FLOW ,PROFITABILITY ,FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT ,FINANCIAL PRODUCTS ,PROMISSORY NOTE ,ACCESS TO FINANCE ,LOCAL MARKET ,REPAYMENT CAPACITIES ,FINANCIAL SERVICE ,JOINT LIABILITY ,LOW-INCOME FAMILIES ,DISBURSEMENTS ,LOAN AMOUNT ,MUTUAL FUND ,SAVINGS ACCOUNT ,NEED FOR CREDIT ,ACCIDENTS ,INFORMAL LOANS ,PORTFOLIO ,FINANCIAL SERVICE PROVIDER ,REPAYMENT RECORDS ,ACCOUNTING ,FINANCES ,INCENTIVE STRUCTURES ,MICROFINANCE PRACTITIONERS ,INSTALLMENTS ,SALARY ,WOMAN ,MONEY LENDERS ,REPAYMENT SCHEDULES ,REPAYMENTS ,FINANCIAL VIABILITY ,LOAN PRODUCTS ,VILLAGE ,PENALTIES ,REPAYMENT BEHAVIOR ,FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ,FINANCIAL STABILITY ,SMALL INSTALMENTS ,NEW PRODUCT ,INSURANCE ,HOUSEHOLDS ,BANKING SERVICES ,PEOPLES ,FINANCIAL SHOCKS ,EMPLOYER ,NATURAL DISASTERS ,BANKS ,LIFE INSURANCE ,BORROWING ,MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS ,BRANCHES ,POTENTIAL BORROWERS ,LOAN ,LATE PAYMENTS ,EXPENDITURES ,FINANCIAL ACCESS ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,MONEY MARKET ,CREDIT PRODUCTS ,MICROFINANCE ,CASH ADVANCES ,REPAYMENT ,HOLDING COMPANY ,SMALL-BUSINESS LOANS ,PAWNBROKER ,SMALL-BUSINESS ,OPERATING COST ,CASH FLOWS ,SAVINGS ,FINANCIAL NEEDS ,BRANCH ,OUTREACH ,FINANCING NEEDS ,INTEREST RATE ,MAXIMUM LOAN AMOUNT ,FINANCIAL CONCERNS ,FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS ,EXPENDITURE ,ADVISORY SERVICES ,STORE - Abstract
The poor and other underserved populations in developing countries have unique financial service s needs. However, there is often a mismatch between what financial institutions offer and what underserved populations need or want. This product gap may reflect a lack of interest by financial institutions in designing more target products, or a lack of willingness or capacity on the part of financial institutions to design, market and implement tailor-made financial products. The objectives of the Product Design Case Studies are to 1) develop expertise related to product design and innovation processes through a better understanding of best practices in the field, in depth research and application of behavioral economics concepts; 2) increase awareness of product design/innovation and the links between product development and financial inclusion; and 3) generate publicity and knowledge sharing around product design and innovation. While the hand loan product was broadly successful in achieving its original intent, the pilot encountered considerable institutional and execution challenges that are instructive for future product innovation efforts. The first two sections describe the problem and the innovative product designed to address it. The next section describes the final design and implementation of the product in detail. The fourth section covers post-pilot data collection and results. The final sections discuss lessons learned and planned future enhancements.
- Published
- 2015
33. Cardboard Continental
- Author
-
Baxter, John, author
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. 'My Holocaust Is Not Your Holocaust': 'Facing' Black and Jewish Experience in The Pawnbroker, Higher Ground, and The Nature of Blood
- Author
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Wendy Zierler
- Subjects
Literature ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Judaism ,Tragedy ,people.profession ,Postmodernism ,Diaspora ,The Holocaust ,Pawnbroker ,Law ,Reading (process) ,Political Science and International Relations ,Narrative ,Sociology ,people ,business ,media_common - Abstract
What is to be gained by drawing literary comparisons between the African Diaspora experience of slavery and the Jewish experience of the Holocaust? Can such comparisons be made without distorting the historical record? This article critiques the juxtaposition of tragedy found in The Pawnbroker—both the novel and the film version—and offers a reading of Cynthia Ozick's The Shawl as a polemical response to The Pawnbroker. Two Holocaust-related novels by the West Indian writer Caryl Phillips are then examined as models of how a literary text can enact a “facing” of black and Jewish experience through the postmodern technique of narrative fragmentation and juxtaposition.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. 'Teach Me Gold': Pedagogy and Memory in The Pawnbroker
- Author
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Alan Rosen
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Religious studies ,Puerto rican ,people.profession ,Representation (arts) ,Literacy ,The Holocaust ,Pawnbroker ,Pedagogy ,Sociology ,Adaptation (computer science) ,people ,Legitimacy ,media_common ,Inarticulateness - Abstract
This essay examines the role of pedagogy and memory in the 1965 film adaptation of The Pawnbroker, a story of a survivor unable to mourn. I show that, in contrast to most pawnbroking films, this one transforms the pawnshop into a classroom in which the survivor attempts to give lessons in literacy, history, and values to his assistant, a Puerto Rican. Despite the pawnbroker's efforts, the lessons ultimately fail to give the assistant the cultural legitimacy that he seeks. I also suggest a number of ways The Pawnbroker works to establish its own legitimacy. First, a critical voice explicitly challenges the Europe-to-America model of transmission. Second, the film's representation of Holocaust memory emerges from an innovative synthesis of the visual ¯ashback and verbal inarticulateness. Third, The Pawnbroker self-consciously plays off the most in¯uential postwar European example of filmic memory, Hiroshima, mon amour, and points to an alternative model of coming to terms with the memory of trauma.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Hollywood's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: breaking the code
- Author
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Nancy McGuire Roche and David Lavery
- Subjects
Hollywood ,History ,Art history ,people.profession ,Environmental ethics ,Code (semiotics) ,GEORGE (programming language) ,Pawnbroker ,Performance art ,Haskell ,people ,computer ,American literature ,computer.programming_language ,Drama - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Frequency of and responses to illegal activity related to commerce in firearms: findings from the Firearms Licensee Survey
- Author
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Garen J. Wintemute
- Subjects
Response rate (survey) ,Firearms ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Law enforcement ,Commerce ,people.profession ,Poison control ,Advertising ,Quarter (United States coin) ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,United States ,Logistic Models ,Attitude ,Pawnbroker ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,Forensic engineering ,Humans ,Business ,Crime ,people - Abstract
Background Firearms may be obtained illegally from federally-licensed dealers and pawnbrokers through surrogate (straw) purchases, undocumented purchases and theft. Some retailers knowingly make illegal sales. Objective To obtain information about the frequency of and risk factors for these events, and retailers’ reactions to them, directly from licensed retailers. Methods Survey of a random sample of 1601 licensed dealers and pawnbrokers in 43 states who were believed to sell ≥50 firearms annually, conducted by mail during June–August 2011. Results The response rate was 36.9%, typical of establishment surveys using such methods. In the preceding year, 67.3% of respondents experienced attempted straw purchases; 42.4% experienced undocumented purchase attempts. For each event, 10% reported ≥1 occurrence/month. A quarter (25.6%) experienced firearm theft in the preceding 5 years. Pawnbroker status, sales volume, denied sales and sales of firearms that were subsequently traced by law enforcement were associated with all outcomes in multivariate analysis. Estimates of retailer involvement in illegal sales (median 3%, IQR 1–10%) were related in multivariate analysis to respondents’ age and sex, and to denied sales. In a hypothetical case involving 50 illegal sales, respondents recommended prolonged incarceration (median 10 years, IQR 5–20 years) and a substantial fine (median $50 000, IQR $10 000–$250 000) for retailers and made similar recommendations for buyers. Conclusions Attempts to acquire firearms illegally from licensed dealers and pawnbrokers are common. Characteristics associated with frequency of occurrence may facilitate prevention efforts. Licensed retailers consider selling and buying firearms illegally to be serious crimes.
- Published
- 2013
38. Basic concepts relevant to the design and development of the point Contact Fixator (PC-Fix)
- Author
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S.M. Perren and Joy S. Buchanan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Art history ,people.profession ,Fracture treatment ,Surgery ,Point contact ,Pawnbroker ,Bone plate ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business ,people ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Summar� 1 bla bla bla bla One aardvark marries the pawnbroker, even though five bourgeois cats tickled umpteen Macintoshes, but two obese elephants drunkenly towed umpteen almost irascible sheep. Two bureaux easily telephoned Paul, even though the wart hogs gossips, but one elephant tastes partly putrid wart hogs, because umpteen purple botulisms kisses Mark, although the subways bought one extremely angst-ridden lampstand, even though five obese televisions perused subways, then five progressive mats auctioned off the bureau, although two trailers grew up, but irascible Jabberwockies untangles five speedy fountains, yet one cat ran away, then the trailer very cleverly kisses two irascible bureaux.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The legal regulation of pawnbroking in England, a brief history
- Author
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Warren Swain and Karen Fairweather
- Subjects
Receipt ,Oppression ,Unconscionability ,Freedom of contract ,Immorality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fornication ,people.profession ,Usury ,Pawnbroker ,Law ,Economics ,people ,media_common - Abstract
It is fair to say that pawnbrokers have not always enjoyed a very good reputation. In an action of slander brought by a pawnbroker, Holt CJ admitted that, ‘The trade of a broker is an honest lawful trade, though it lies under suspicions.’ The views of one late seventeenth-century writer were not untypical: An unconscionable pawn-broker, I say, is Pluto's Factor, Old Nick's Warehouse-keeper, and English Jew that lives and grows fat on Fraud and Oppression, as Toads on Filth and Venome; whose Practice out-vies Usury, as much as Incest simple Fornication; and to call him a Tradesman, must be by the same Figure that Pickpockets stile their Legerdemain an Art and Mystery. His Shop, like Hellgates, is always open, where he sits at the Receipt of Custom, like Cacus in his Den, ready to devour. Much of the criticism emphasised the supposed immorality of pawnbrokers. But there were more specific allegations too. Pawnbrokers were variously accused of dealing in stolen goods, deliberately understating the value of pawned goods, wearing clothes that were pledged, selling off pledges before they could be redeemed, and charging beyond the maximum permitted rate of interest. These abuses did not come about because of an absence of legal regulation. By the mid eighteenth century, as well as the prohibitions on interest, pawnbroking transactions were also governed by detailed statutory rules.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Teaching Holocaust Literature and Film to History Students: Teaching The Pawnbroker (1961/1965)
- Author
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Tim J Cole
- Subjects
business.industry ,The Holocaust ,Pawnbroker ,Medicine ,American film ,people.profession ,Art history ,Happy ending ,Representation (arts) ,business ,people ,Humanities ,Fine art - Abstract
In this essay, I explore the ways that I use Holocaust literature and film when teaching history students, through a case study of my classroom use of Edward Lewis Wallant’s 1961 novel, The Pawnbroker, which formed the basis for Sidney Lumet’s 1965 film of the same name. Wallant’s novel and Lumet’s film feature in my teaching of the history of representation of the Holocaust in the post-war world alongside other films—Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah (1985) and Roberto Benigni’s Life is Beautiful (1998)—Art Spiegelman’s Maus (1986 & 1991), Binjamin Wilkomirski’s Fragments (1996), as well as a host of other post-war representations including memorials, museums, fine art, historical texts, and Holocaust trials.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Will Ladislaw and Other Italians With White Mice
- Author
-
Juliet McMaster
- Subjects
Literature ,White (horse) ,History ,business.industry ,people.profession ,Light touch ,General Medicine ,Sister ,Placard ,Pawnbroker ,White mouse ,HERO ,people ,business ,Classics - Abstract
The well-heeled widow, Mrs Dorothea Casaubon, has respectable relatives and friends who are eager to guard her from the upstart pretensions of the bohemian Will Ladislaw. Her sister Celia quotes the local phrase-maker: "Mrs Cadwallader said you might as well marry an Italian with white mice!" (Eliot 532). Dorothea ruefully ponders this label, and still remembers it months later, when other derogatory labels are being added. " Young Ladislaw the grandson of a thieving Jew pawnbroker was a phrase which had entered emphatically into the dialogues ... at Lowick, Tipton and Freshitt, and was a worse kind of placard on poor Will ' s back than the ' Italian with white mice " (829). The annotatore of the Riverside, Penguin, Norton, and Clarendon editions of Middlemarch are all silent on this rather intriguing comparison for Will Ladislaw; and since several generations of students of Middlemarch have sought information in vain, I accept the task of explanation. I feel particularly qualified, both as a long-time admirer of the much maligned hero of Middlemarch, and as one who reared hundreds of white mice in her youth, including one who travelled with me (usually in my shirt) from Kenya to England and back. Italians have been frequently associated with white mice in Victorian England, both in fiction and history. 1111 start with the fiction. Elizabeth Gaskell's tale of Manchester life, Mary Barton (1848), features an Italian child with a pet white mouse, who together reinforce that novel ? s thesis that the most generous protectors of the poor are the other poor. Mary Barton, the working-class heroine, has much else on her mind as she hurries through the streets near her home: her impetuous course was arrested by a light touch on her arm, and turning hastily, she saw a little Italian boy, with his humble show box,?a white mouse, or some such thing. (284)
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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42. The Mirror Crack'd: British Expressionism
- Author
-
Jim Leach
- Subjects
Silence ,History ,Pawnbroker ,people.profession ,Art history ,Performance art ,Environmental ethics ,Tempest ,Vsevolod ,people ,Landy - Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Raskol'nikovs Paradox
- Author
-
Yannis Kakridis
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Linguistics and Language ,Psychoanalysis ,Literature and Literary Theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Repentance ,people.profession ,Commit ,Language and Linguistics ,Character (mathematics) ,Law ,Pawnbroker ,Sociology ,people ,media_common - Abstract
According to Raskolnikov's "Napoleonic idea", exceptional individuals are entitled to commit crimes for the benefit of society. His murder of the old pawnbroker serves as an experiment which is to show whether he himselfis an exceptional individual or not. The self-referential character of this experiment gives it a paradoxical twist and this, in turn; makes it impossible for Raskolnikov to understand the motive of his crime and feel real repentance about it.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Meaningful Montage
- Author
-
Annette Insdorf and Elie Wiesel
- Subjects
Pawnbroker ,media_common.quotation_subject ,people.profession ,Performance art ,Persona ,Art ,High Street ,people ,media_common ,Visual arts - Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The origins of ordinary banking: another bank mania, 1875–1881
- Author
-
Norio Tamaki
- Subjects
Economy ,Capital (economics) ,Pawnbroker ,Private bank ,medicine ,people.profession ,Financial system ,Business ,medicine.symptom ,Land tenure ,people ,National bank ,Mania - Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The 1923 catastrophic earthquake, 1927 financial disaster and the new Bank Act, 1923–1927
- Author
-
Norio Tamaki
- Subjects
Finance ,Overdraft ,business.industry ,Agriculture ,Limited liability ,Pawnbroker ,Capital (economics) ,people.profession ,Business ,Post office ,Security market ,people - Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. An Interview with Ulu Grosbard
- Author
-
Carole Zucker
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Subject (philosophy) ,Art history ,people.profession ,Art ,Delicacy ,Miracle ,Pawnbroker ,Poetic realism ,Falling in love ,people ,Studio ,media_common ,Drama - Abstract
Ulu Grosbard brings an impeccable precision and delicacy to his work with some of the America’s finest film actors—Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall, Dustin Hoffman, and Meryl Streep. And although Grosbard’s film career has been confined, thus far, to five films—The Subject Was Roses (1968), Who Is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things about Me? (1971), Straight Time (1978), True Confessions (1981), and Falling in Love (1984)—that circumscribed field is profuse with radiant moments of acting. The frame within which Grosbard works is poetic realism, the most celebrated, home-grown school of American drama. It is deeply character-driven, rich in psychological tensions, and refulgent with a sense of time and place. Clearly, we are in the territory of The Actors Studio, where Grosbard has attended sessions since the 1960s. The Studio is also the native habitat of the directors with whom Grosbard inaugurated his film career as assistant director: Elia Kazan (Splendor in the Grass, 1961), Arthur Penn (The Miracle Worker, 1962), and Sidney Lumet (The Pawnbroker, 1965).
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Pawnbroker's Account
- Author
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P.J. Sijpesteijn and Faculteit der Letteren
- Subjects
Archeology ,History ,Philosophy ,Pawnbroker ,people.profession ,Classics ,people - Published
- 1994
49. New gallery celebrates life and work of Britain's first woman doctor
- Author
-
David Payne
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Daughter ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Engineering ,Art history ,people.profession ,General Medicine ,Queen (playing card) ,Work (electrical) ,Pawnbroker ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,people ,business ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Abstract
The gynaecologist Wendy Savage was driving down London’s Euston Road in 1992 when she spotted protestors fighting to save the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital. Founded in 1890 by the East End pawnbroker’s daughter who became Britain’s first woman to gain a medical qualification, the hospital treated only women and children until its closure in 2000, when services were transferred to the nearby University College Hospital. Professor Savage founded the “EGA for women” campaign. Its achievements include getting the Queen Anne-style building listed and, to …
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. 'Teach Me Gold': Pedagogy and Memory in The Pawnbroker
- Author
-
Rosen
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pawnbroker ,Pedagogy ,Religious studies ,people.profession ,Art ,people ,media_common - Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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