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Popular culture and anti-austerity protest
Author(s) -
Rebecca Bramall
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of european popular culture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2040-6142
pISSN - 2040-6134
DOI - 10.1386/jepc.3.1.9_1
Subject(s) - austerity , politics , political economy , political science , element (criminal law) , contingency , coalition government , sociology , law , epistemology , philosophy
The prevailing description of our times as an ‘age of austerity’ has hardened into an axiom with extraordinary rapidity. Focusing on contemporary popular and consumer culture in Britain, this article makes a contribution to the task of subjecting the discourse of ‘austerity’ to the consideration it properly demands. I identify and interrogate the meanings that ‘austerity’ has in contemporary culture, and recall the contingency of the processes through which these meanings have been consolidated, a task that is all the more urgent, I suggest, when it feels like one prevailing signification has already ‘won out’. The article is organized around the discussion of three dominant meanings of austerity: austerity as ‘responsible politics’, deficit reduction and coalition government policy; austerity as the ‘other’ that defines left-political struggle; and austerity as ‘austerity chic’. The latter points to a conception of austerity as object of desire, an element which I develop and use to question the currently dominant critical position in left-cultural politics, the position of being ‘anti-austerity’

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