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Banking and Finance

2009

Christine Sgarlata Chung

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

From Lily Bart To The Boom Boom Room: How Wall Street’S Social And Cultural Response To Women Has Shaped Securities Regulation, Christine Sgarlata Chung Aug 2009

From Lily Bart To The Boom Boom Room: How Wall Street’S Social And Cultural Response To Women Has Shaped Securities Regulation, Christine Sgarlata Chung

Christine Sgarlata Chung

In Edith Wharton’s 1905 novel House of Mirth, Lily Bart learns in one brutal moment what happens to women who get tangled up with the stock market. Though she is beautiful and well-born, Lily is vulnerable when she seeks salvation in the stock market – she has no family to support her, no fortune of her own, no training in business matters, and no socially acceptable means of acquiring money, save marriage. When the husband of a friend (Gus Treanor) offers to help Lily by speculating in the stock market, Lily agrees. And when Treanor begins presenting Lily with money, …


From Lily Bart To The Boom Boom Room: How Wall Street’S Social And Cultural Response To Women Has Shaped Securities Regulation, Christine Sgarlata Chung Aug 2009

From Lily Bart To The Boom Boom Room: How Wall Street’S Social And Cultural Response To Women Has Shaped Securities Regulation, Christine Sgarlata Chung

Christine Sgarlata Chung

In Edith Wharton’s 1905 novel House of Mirth, Lily Bart learns in one brutal moment what happens to women who get tangled up with the stock market. Though she is beautiful and well-born, Lily is vulnerable when she seeks salvation in the stock market – she has no family to support her, no fortune of her own, no training in business matters, and no socially acceptable means of acquiring money, save marriage. When the husband of a friend (Gus Treanor) offers to help Lily by speculating in the stock market, Lily agrees. And when Treanor begins presenting Lily with money, …


From Lily Bart To The Boom Boom Room: How Wall Street’S Social And Cultural Response To Women Has Shaped Securities Regulation, Christine Sgarlata Chung Aug 2009

From Lily Bart To The Boom Boom Room: How Wall Street’S Social And Cultural Response To Women Has Shaped Securities Regulation, Christine Sgarlata Chung

Christine Sgarlata Chung

In Edith Wharton’s 1905 novel House of Mirth, Lily Bart learns in one brutal moment what happens to women who get tangled up with the stock market. Though she is beautiful and well-born, Lily is vulnerable when she seeks salvation in the stock market – she has no family to support her, no fortune of her own, no training in business matters, and no socially acceptable means of acquiring money, save marriage. When the husband of a friend (Gus Treanor) offers to help Lily by speculating in the stock market, Lily agrees. And when Treanor begins presenting Lily with money, …