Project overview
The History of Financial Advice is a collaborative research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, involving literary critics, economic historians and partners from the financial industry and from financial education.
It examined the cultural work that financial advice achieves and traces the development of the genre from the eighteenth to the twenty first century. It is the latest stage of a longer collaborative project exploring the meanings and representations of finance and money.
Outcomes included the first comprehensive history of financial advice (the book Invested, published by Chicago University Press), the creation of a new archive of financial advice, at the Library of Mistakes in Edinburgh, an Open Access Future Learn course and a suite of new financial educational material.
It examined the cultural work that financial advice achieves and traces the development of the genre from the eighteenth to the twenty first century. It is the latest stage of a longer collaborative project exploring the meanings and representations of finance and money.
Outcomes included the first comprehensive history of financial advice (the book Invested, published by Chicago University Press), the creation of a new archive of financial advice, at the Library of Mistakes in Edinburgh, an Open Access Future Learn course and a suite of new financial educational material.
Staff
Lead researchers
Other researchers
Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups
Research outputs
Paul Crosthwaite, Peter Knight, Nicky Marsh, Helen Paul & James Taylor,
2022
Type: book