Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
1 Introduction: The Study of the Greek Economic Crisis in Europe through the Media
1.1 Contextual Issues, Critical Political Economy and Cultural Studies
1.2 European Mass Media as the Empirical Material of the Study
1.2.1 A Brief Excursion on Liberalism and its Discontents
1.2.2 Greek, Danish and German Liberal Press
1.3 On Method: Thematic Analysis, Discourse Theory Analysis, Critical Discourse Analysis
1.3.1 The Relevance of Discourse Theory
1.3.2 Critical Discourse Analysis Perspectives
1.4 The Analytical Pillars: Race, Class, Politics
1.4.1 On Race
1.4.1.1 Colonial Remainders: An Eternal Greece
1.4.2 On Class
1.4.2.1 Class Hegemony
1.4.3 Theorizing (Post)Politics
1.5 An Outline of the Chapters to Follow
2 Greek Crisis, Eurozone Crisis, Global Capitalist Crisis
2.1 Setting the Greek Crisis in Perspective
2.2 A Crisis of Capitalism and Capitalist Crises: A Brief Excursion to Marxian Analyses
2.3 Crisis and Restructuring: Neoliberalism, Globalisation, Financialisation
2.4 The Greek Crisis as a Symptom: Centre and Periphery Divisions
2.5 The EU, the Euro, and Austerity
2.6 Debt, Restructuring and Primary Accumulation
2.7 Concluding Remarks: Understanding Capitalism as Religion
3 The Greek Crisis in the Media: Hegemony, Spectacle and Propaganda
3.1 Media Aspects
3.2 Political Communication and the Public Sphere
3.3 Understanding Hegemony
3.3.1 The Greek Crisis in the Media: A Critical Overview
3.3.2 Hegemony, Propaganda and Biopolitics
3.4 Spectacular Dimensions of the Greek Crisis
3.5 Concluding Remarks: Interpellating and Disciplining the Working Class
4 A Cultural Failure: Reification, Orientalism, Nationalism
4.1 Introduction: (I)liberal Uses of Culture
4.2 Hegemonic Constructions of the (Occidental) Self and the (Oriental) Other
4.3 Greece as a non/quasi-European Other
4.3.1 The Culturalisation of Greece and its Crisis
4.3.2 Greece as a Commodity: Media Rituals to Sustain Ideological Myths
4.3.3 Nationalism, Narcissism, Anxiety: Europe as a Panopticon and a Benchmark
4.4 Concluding Remarks: The Occident, the Orient and the Liberal Meritocracy Cult
5 Under a Middle-Class Gaze
5.1 Governing Inequality
5.2 The Middle-Class Gaze and the Media
5.3 The Loser as a Master Class Frame
5.4 The Greek Crisis and the Construction of Losers
5.4.1 The Irrational: Ignorant, Irresponsible, and Frustrated
5.4.2 The Immoral: Lazy, Profligate, Deceitful and Bankrupt
5.4.3 The Threatening Other: Resentment, Spite, and Loath
5.4.4 Idealising the Bourgeois; the Enduring Myths of a Peripheral Upper Class
5.5 Concluding Remarks: Reaction, Diversion, Division
6 Exceptionalising the Crisis, Normalising Austerity
6.1 Technocratic Politics
6.2 Establishing the Crisis and Austerity Publicly in Depoliticised Terms
6.2.1 The Eurozone Crisis as an Apocalyptic Spectacle: Mediatised States of Exception
6.2.2 Naturalizing Austerity; the Only Solution (Without an Alternative)
6.2.3 The Extreme Center and Constructions of Realism
6.3Concluding Remarks: Authoritarian Capitalism with Fascist Dispositions
7 Conclusions: Context, Politics, Negativity
7.1 Reinventing Critique, Reinventing Politics
7.2 Debunking Hegemony's Crisis' Myths
7.3 The Making of Regimes of Entitlement: Class is at the Heart of the Matter
7.4 Capitalism is Apocalyptic: Politicizing the Crisis, Austerity, the Free Market, and the (Capitalist) Economy
7.5 Negativity and Utopia
Bibliography
Index