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About Scott Ferguson

Scott Ferguson (@videotroph) is associate professor of Film & Media Studies in the Department of Humanities & Cultural Studies at the University of South Florida. He co-directs the Modern Money Network Humanities Division and hosts the Money on the Left podcast. His book Declarations of Dependence: Money, Aesthetics, and the Politics of Care was published by University of Nebraska Press in 2018.
  • Place-Based Narrative Labor with Sonia Ivancic

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Money on the Left speaks with Dr. Sonia Ivancic about the importance of regionally sensitive and affirmative storytelling in provisioning processes. Assistant Professor in organizational communication at University of South Florida, Dr. Ivancic is a community-engaged researcher, whose work on “place-based narrative labor” offers essential new tools for displacing prevailing scarcity logics and rhetorics of austerity with more capacious ways of thinking, arguing, and narrating. 

  • Weimar Futurities with Engelbert Stockhammer

    Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas and Scott Ferguson

    Engelbert Stockhammer joins Money on the Left to discuss the political and economic debates that shaped and ultimately devastated Weimar-era Germany. Professor Stockhammer is professor of political economy in the department of European and International Studies at King’s College London and has published widely on financial instability and Post-Keynesian economics.

  • Adorno, Lazarsfeld and the Birth of Public Broadcasting with Josh Shepperd

    Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas and Scott Ferguson

    Josh Shepperd joins Money on the Left to discuss the research and activism that hastened the rise of public media in the United States. Assistant Professor of media studies at the University of Colorado-Boulder, Shepperd shows how public-interest broadcasting platforms like NPR and PBS exist in the U.S. today in large part as a consequence of hard-fought battles by committed scholars and advocates throughout the inter- and post-war periods.

  • Ballerinas on the Dole with Colleen Hooper

    Scott Ferguson and Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas

    In this episode, we talk with Colleen Hooper (@hoopercolleen), assistant professor of dance at Point Park University. Hooper’s 2017 article in the Dance Research Journal, titled “Ballerinas on the Dole: Dance and the Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA), 1974-1982,” is the subject of most of our conversation.

  • Vulnerability Theory with Martha Fineman

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Money on the Left discusses “vulnerability theory” with Martha Fineman, Robert W. Woodruff Professor of Law at Emory University. Going beyond the politics of non-discrimination and formal equality that animate liberal politics and policies, Fineman underscores the human being’s embodied vulnerability throughout the life cycle in order to politicize, rather than pathologize prevailing structures of social dependence.

  • The Metaphysics of Accounting with Paolo Quattrone

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Paolo Quattrone (@PaoloQuattrone) joins Money on the Left to discuss the metaphysics of accounting and the significance of accounting’s repressed history for political economy today. Professor of Accounting, Governance & Society at The University of Manchester, Quattrone insists that, while often seen as a positivist and merely technical skill for recording extant data, accounting in truth represents a rhetorical and quite generative engagement with the “mystery of value.”

  • Radical Heterodoxies & Parallel Institutions w/ Mat Forstater

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Mat Forstater joins Money on the Left to discuss the origins of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), the vicissitudes of heterodox economics, and the challenges of building alternative institutions in and beyond the academy. As one of the principal architects of MMT, as well as teacher and advisor to many of the more recognized MMT scholars and advocates today, Forstater is perhaps the best equipped heterodox economist to give us the details on the innovative assumptions and arguments that created the firmament for what we now know as Modern Monetary Theory.

  • Abstractions also Liberate with Anna Kornbluh

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Anna Kornbluh joins Money on the Left to discuss the politics of form and literary realism as theorized in her provocative book, The Order of Forms: Realism, Formalism, and Social Space (University of Chicago Press, 2019). In The Order of Forms, Kornbluh lays bare the problematic “anarcho-vitalist” underpinnings of neoliberal discourse which, she argues, also inform much  critical theory and left critique.

  • The Philosophy of Money with Graham Hubbs

    Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Graham Hubbs speaks with Scott Ferguson and Andrés Bernal about the relationship between Modern Monetary Theory and philosophy. Associate Professor & chair of the department of politics & philosophy at the University of Idaho, Hubbs convened a conference panel on Modern Monetary Theory at the annual meeting of the American Philosophical Association in January 2021.

  • Building Digital Commons with Cory Doctorow

    Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas and Scott Ferguson

    Cory Doctorow joins Money on the Left to discuss what Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) means for building digital commons. He walks us through his important critical genealogy of Intellectual Property law as well as his contribution to the urgent anti-monopoly accord called the “Access to Knowledge Treaty.”

  • Digital Money Beyond Blockchain with Rohan Grey

    Scott Ferguson and Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas

    In this episode, we’re joined by Rohan Grey (@rohangrey), President of the Modern Money Network, Director of the National Jobs for All Coalition, Research Fellow at the Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity, and JSD student at Cornell Law school. Our conversation is dedicated to Rohan’s current work on the political, economic, and cultural implications of money’s digital future.

  • Kenya in the Digital Finance Revolution with Sibel Kusimba

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Money on the Left speaks with Sibel Kusimba, Associate Professor of Anthropology at University of South Florida, about her work on mobile money and digital finance in Kenya. In her recently published book with Stanford University Press titled Reimagining Money: Kenya in the Digital Finance Revolution, Kusimba both theorizes and critiques Kenya’s thriving M-Pesa mobile phone-based payment system as a constitutive component of Kenyan social life.

  • Remaking Radicalism with Dan Berger & Emily K. Hobson

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Money on the Left is joined by Emily K. Hobson and Dan Berger, coeditors and curators of the recently published collection Remaking Radicalism: A Grassroots Documentary Reader of the United States, 1973-2001.

  • Ministry for the Future with Kim Stanley Robinson

    Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson and William Saas

    Science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson joins Money on the Left to discuss his Modern Monetary Theory-inspired “cli-fi” novel, The Ministry for the Future (2020).

  • Heterodox Properties with Lua Kamal Yuille

    Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas and Scott Ferguson

    Money on the Left is joined by Dr. Lua Kamal Yuille to discuss heterodox economics, property law & the politics of vulnerability. We chat with Yuille about her path from law to heterodox economics, and, more specifically, about how Modern Monetary Theory has variously shaped and affirmed her critical perspective toward property law.

  • The Franciscan Invention of the New World with Julia McClure

    Scott Ferguson and Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas

    Money on the Left is joined by Julia McClure, lecturer in Late Medieval & Early Modern Global History at the University of Glasgow. McClure’s 2017 book, The Franciscan Invention of the World, draws compelling and confounding conclusions about the role of the late Medieval Franciscans in shaping the modern capitalist and colonialist world. We talk with McClure […]

  • Money as a Constitutional Project with Christine Desan

    Scott Ferguson and Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas

    In this episode we are joined by Christine Desan, Leo Goettlieb professor of law at Harvard Law School to discuss her excellent book, Making Money: Coin, Currency, and the Coming of Capitalism.

  • New Laws of Robotics with Frank Pasquale

    William Saas and Maxximilian Seijo and Scott Ferguson

    Frank Pasquale joins Money on the Left to discuss the legal and monetary politics that will determine the future of automation. Professor of Law at the Brooklyn Law School, Pasquale is author of The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money  and Information (2015) as well as recently published New Laws of Robotics: […]

  • Public Money, Public Media with Victor Pickard

    Scott Ferguson and Maxximilian Seijo and William Saas

    Victor Pickard joins Money on the Left to discuss the public bases and potentials of money and media in The United States. Professor of Media Policy and Political Economy at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, Pickard is a prolific researcher and author of over one hundred articles and six books […]

  • What if Everyone on Campus Understood Money?: A Response to Chronicle of Higher Ed Columnist Allison Vaillancourt

    William Saas and Scott Ferguson and Maxximilian Seijo and Benjamin Wilson

    Let’s give credit where it’s due: After experiencing decades of neoliberal austerity and serving for nearly as long as pawns in tiresome culture wars, public higher education workers know all too well how the money works on our campuses and in our states. Students and alumni are the major sources of revenue; graduate workers and […]

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