Common Concerns
In this episode of the “Common Concerns” podcast, Xiang Biao and Ferda Nur Demirci discuss the concept of “moral immunity” in relation to the indebtedness of miners in Soma, Turkey. In her research, Ferda examines how miners use debt to regulate their intimate relationships and to achieve a sense of moral immunity. This concept is characterised by a desire to be immune to the demands and pressures of family and friends, enabling the individual to maintain a sense of independence and self-discipline. She argues that the miners’ use of debt is not driven solely by consumerism or the desire for material goods, but rather by the need to regulate their relationships and attain a sense of moral immunity. This is particularly evident in the context of marriage payments, where debt is used to establish a sense of independence and self-reliance. Ferdas’s research highlights how the miners’ indebtedness has created a new form of class consciousness, in which people identify as members of the same group, yet without a sense of concrete, direct connections. This is characterised by empathy, but not necessarily by a willingness to act on behalf of others or to intervene. The podcast also explores how the miners’ relationships have changed, with a shift from a culture of sharing and solidarity towards separate households and nuclear families. Whilst some forms of solidarity, such as the sharing of agricultural produce, still exist, debt management has become the norm in the region. Overall, this episode offers a nuanced examination of the complex relationships between debt, morality, and intimacy in the context of neoliberal capitalism.
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