The Favour Bank
The Favour Bank was coined by American writer
Tom Wolfe
in his book
The Bonfire of the
Vanities, in the book the Favour Bank is the trading of favours in the business and professional
world. A record is kept of the favours given and received just like borrowing and repaying money in a
traditional bank.
The title of Chapter 17 in
The Bonfire of the Vanities is "The Favour Bank", a summary of the chapter can be found at
GradeSaver.com.
The following Favour Bank references are from the
GradeSaver.com
Analysis section of "The Favour Bank" chapter.
Killian's exposition of The Favour Bank, like the earlier explanations of the
backlogged Bronx justice system and the search for the Great White Defendant,
illustrates the extent to which the legal world opporates according to arbitrary
(hardly "just") patterns of favouritism. It's very obvious by now that
the justice system obeys power, not any abstract ideal of fairness before the
law, but Wolfe hammers the point home in his colorful and broad way.
In Sherman's case, The Great White Defendant priority will trump The Favour
Bank, not because The Favour Bank isn't an important part of New York law, but
because the political timbre of the hour insists upon prosecuting a white man.
Wolfe wishes us to see Sherman as caught in a struggle of competing corruption,
and to begin to feel a bit sorry for the guy, scum though he may be. Sherman is
Wolfe's Lamb (pardon the pun): a not-so-innocent-but-innocent-enough sacrifice
to a ravenous race-baiting media. Whether you wish to agree with Wolfe is, of
course, up to you.