Dr. Brooke Harrington's newest book just released.
Eagerly awaited. Just released. Diving right in.
I also thoroughly enjoyed her prior book Capital Without Borders.
“He is surrounded by a mysterious halo of family confidences, of which he is known to be the silent depository.” With these words, Charles Dickens introduces one of his most memorable characters: Mr. Tulkinghorn, the villain of Bleak House. Tulkinghorn is a lawyer specializing in trusts and estates, making him privy to the private lives of Britain’s nobility. A master of legal intricacies, Tulkinghorn’s emotionless, unreadable façade gives him a reputation much prized by his clients for protecting their secrets, as well as their fortunes.
Though he is their employee, Tulkinghorn wields a power that quietly controls the lives of his clients. This distinguishes him from the legion of other professionals and servants in the novel: unlike the family physicians, butlers, and governesses who serve the nobles, Tulkinghorn’s knowledge of the families’ innermost workings makes him their master. Such “inside outsiders” deserve more scrutiny than they have received, given their role in managing large capital flows at the boundary of private family life and the public worlds of law and the market. This is a gap in knowledge that I aspire to fill here.
In a sense, Bleak House can be read as a story of the triumph of professionals over nobles, and of knowledge over wealth. Dickens’ description of Tulkinghorn as the “master of the mysteries of great houses” is reminiscent of what Max Weber once wrote of the court accountants of the Persian shah: they “made a secret doctrine of their budgetary art and even use a secret script” to consolidate their power and ensure the shah’s dependence upon them through obfuscation.3 This is one way of characterizing elite professional work, particularly in the domain now known as “wealth management”—the business of deploying legal and financial expertise to defend the fortunes of high-net-worth individuals and families…
Harrington, Brooke. Capital without Borders: Wealth Managers and the One Percent (pp. 1-2). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.
OFFSHORE
Hmmm... "Offshore?" Ring any bells here? Sam Bankman-Fried, anyone?
Brooke has done a ton of fine work. Read some of her related Atlantic Monthly pieces.
The American Con Man Who Pioneered Offshore Finance
How a now-obscure financier turned the Bahamas into a tax haven—and created a cornerstone of global plutocracyThe Broligarchs Are Trying to Have Their Way
The antidemocratic politics of having it all
UPDATE
I finished Brooke's book. Excellent. Very engaging. Let me leave you with this for now.
More to come...
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