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Debt and the American Dream: The Specter of Debt and Its Slow Violence among Irregular Migrants from Nepal

By Ina Zharkevich

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Cite As:
Zharkevich, Ina. 2025. “Debt and the American Dream: The Specter of Debt and Its Slow Violence among Irregular Migrants from Nepal.” Cultural Anthropology 40, no. 4: 597–620. https://doi.org/10.14506/ca40.4.02.

Abstract

Drawing on research with irregular migrants from Nepal who borrow up to $60,000 to reach the United States, this article explores what I call the invisible slow violence of debt. By focusing on how debt is embodied in cases of spirit possession, tension, and dis-ease among migrants and their families—the article demonstrates how debt can become a haunting specter that exhausts the vitality of debtors who cannot pay off loans. By following cases in which debts multiplied and became so huge as to become impossible to repay, I show how unproductive debts became destructive and haunted failed migrants. I contrast these unproductive debts with the debts of migrants who made it to the United States and were, however exploitative, productive of social relations and future possibilities beyond the here and now. Debt not only begs to be returned: it can turn into a specter haunting people, or “eating” them out, leading to bodily affliction, dis-ease, social death, or death itself.

Keywords

debt; body; haunting; invisible slow violence; spirit possession; migration; Nepal

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2025 Ina Zharkevich Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.