Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I Cultural Authority and Neoliberal ‘Modernization’
- Chapter 1 Cultural Aspects of the Neoliberal Crisis: Genealogies of a Fractured Legitimacy
- Chapter 2 ‘Standardizing’ from Above: Experts, Intellectuals, and Culture Bubble
- Chapter 3 Arrested Modernities: The Popular Cultures that Could Have Been
- II Cultural Democratizations
- Epilogue. Cultures of Anyone: A Proposal for Encounters
- Works Cited
- Index
Chapter 1 - Cultural Aspects of the Neoliberal Crisis: Genealogies of a Fractured Legitimacy
from I - Cultural Authority and Neoliberal ‘Modernization’
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I Cultural Authority and Neoliberal ‘Modernization’
- Chapter 1 Cultural Aspects of the Neoliberal Crisis: Genealogies of a Fractured Legitimacy
- Chapter 2 ‘Standardizing’ from Above: Experts, Intellectuals, and Culture Bubble
- Chapter 3 Arrested Modernities: The Popular Cultures that Could Have Been
- II Cultural Democratizations
- Epilogue. Cultures of Anyone: A Proposal for Encounters
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
‘… guiada verás de la pura ley la mano del que sabe’
Crisis of a Hierarchical, Individualistic Cultural Model
Circuit of voices about crisis
At first, the ‘crisis’ was just one more news story, one more piece of information, one more topic of conversation in a world of news, information, and topics of conversation. Couched in the language of economists, the crisis appeared in the spring of 2007 as nothing more than an ‘expectation of a slowdown in economic growth.’ It was noted, however, that ‘the level of individual debt was very high due to mortgage rates’ and that ‘the real estate market had cooled.’ The following year, surveys and newspapers confirmed the bad news: ‘63% of Spaniards will have to limit their vacations to only one or two weeks, if that,’ ‘Spaniards Will Spend 15% Less on Seasonal Sales Due to the Economic Slowdown,’ ‘The Crisis Is Pushing Users Towards Buying Cheaper Drugs.’ Because, of course, at the beginning the crisis was already a threat to the fulfillment of individual desires in a world of individuals who seek to fulfill their desires.
From that implicit perspective on life, the media created stories that highlighted the crisis, adding information and showing its effects. They offered the life stories of young men and women who were affected by the crisis. The national newspaper El País quoted a number of them in their 2012 report ‘#Nimileuristas’ (‘not 1,000 euros’) on twenty-somethings and thirty-somethings who earn less than €1,000 a month and are desperate for work: ‘If nobody gives me a chance, how can I get experience?’ ‘I've written up a new resume that says I only have a high school diploma.’ ‘I work three hours a day and earn 200 euros.’ ‘I have never turned down any kind of work’ (El País 2012).
In the wake of this growing adjustment to ‘the crisis,’ and thus to an ever more precarious job market, the big media outlets kept repeating, summer after summer, ‘This year there will be less post-vacation depression because of the crisis.’
- Type
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- Information
- Cultures of AnyoneStudies on Cultural Democratization in the Spanish Neoliberal Crisis, pp. 17 - 63Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2015