TY - JOUR
T1 - Dollars and Delusion: Global Finance, Cultural Trauma and Ethno-economic Subjectivity in Post-boom Iceland
AU - De Kruijf, Johannes Gerrit
AU - Toppen, Anne
PY - 2014/7/14
Y1 - 2014/7/14
N2 - Paradoxically, recent financial crises reveal both the ultimate collapse of 'national capitalism' and the increased prominence of economic nationalism. This article examines the Icelandic case in order to analyse socio-cultural dynamics of economic downfall and to offer an approach to investigate (post-)neoliberal impressions of the nation as economic entity. It employs Piotr Sztompka's work to assess Iceland's economic meltdown in 2008 as traumatizing change that triggered a project of (national) self-transformation. This project, dissected as mnemonic phenomenon, entails reframing the success of bankers as deceit, a call for the purge of politics and business, and various adaptive efforts initiated to realize a sustainable existence in tune with Iceland's 'real' history and geography. We stress that such dissection reveals the influence of macro-economic tendencies on principles and practices of collectivity, and illustrates the relevance of a focus on ethno-economic subjectivity to study the lived experience of those confronted with contemporary politics of finance.
AB - Paradoxically, recent financial crises reveal both the ultimate collapse of 'national capitalism' and the increased prominence of economic nationalism. This article examines the Icelandic case in order to analyse socio-cultural dynamics of economic downfall and to offer an approach to investigate (post-)neoliberal impressions of the nation as economic entity. It employs Piotr Sztompka's work to assess Iceland's economic meltdown in 2008 as traumatizing change that triggered a project of (national) self-transformation. This project, dissected as mnemonic phenomenon, entails reframing the success of bankers as deceit, a call for the purge of politics and business, and various adaptive efforts initiated to realize a sustainable existence in tune with Iceland's 'real' history and geography. We stress that such dissection reveals the influence of macro-economic tendencies on principles and practices of collectivity, and illustrates the relevance of a focus on ethno-economic subjectivity to study the lived experience of those confronted with contemporary politics of finance.
KW - crisis
KW - cultural trauma
KW - Iceland
KW - neoliberalism
KW - subjectivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84903859507&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14782804.2014.893507
DO - 10.1080/14782804.2014.893507
M3 - Article
SN - 1478-2804
SP - 377
EP - 394
JO - Journal of Contemporary European Studies
JF - Journal of Contemporary European Studies
ER -