From prosperity to austerity: A socio-cultural critique of the Celtic Tiger and its aftermath
From prosperity to austerity: A socio-cultural critique of the Celtic Tiger and its aftermath
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Abstract
This book examines the phenomenon of the rise and fall of the Irish Celtic Tiger from a cultural perspective. It looks at Ireland's regression from prosperity to austerity in terms of a society as opposed to just an economy. Using literary and cultural theory, it looks at how this period was influenced by, and in its turn influenced, areas such as religion, popular culture, politics, literature, photography, gastronomy, music, theatre, poetry and film. It seeks to provide some answers as to what exactly happened to Irish society in the past few decades of boom and bust. The socio-cultural rather than the purely economic lens it uses to critique the Celtic Tiger is useful because society and culture are inevitably influenced by what happens in the economic sphere. That said, all of the measures taken in the wake of the financial crash sought to find solutions to aid the ailing economy, and the social and cultural ramifications were shamefully neglected. The aim of this book therefore is to bring the ‘Real’ of the socio-cultural consequences of the Celtic Tiger out of the darkness and to initiate a debate that is, in some respects, equally important as the numerous economic analyses of recent times. The essays analyse how culture and society are mutually-informing discourses and how this synthesis may help us to more fully understand what happened in this period, and more importantly, why it happened.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
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1
Crisis, what crisis? The Catholic Church during the Celtic Tiger years
Eamon Maher
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2
The Celtic Tiger and the new Irish religious market
Catherine Maignant
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3
Shattered assumptions: a tale of two traumas
Brendan Geary
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4
‘Tendency-wit’: the cultural unconscious of the Celtic Tiger in the writings of Paul Howard
Eugene O'Brien
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5
Popular music and the Celtic Tiger
Gerry Smyth
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6
‘What does a woman want?’: irish contemporary women's fiction and the expression of desire in an era of plenty
Sylvie Mikowski
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7
Topographies of terror: photography and the post-Celtic Tiger landscape
Justin Carville
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8
Immigration and the Celtic Tiger
Bryan Fanning
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9
‘What rough beast’? Monsters of Post-Celtic Tiger Ireland
Kieran Keohane andCarmen Kuhling
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10
Women, fictional messages and a crucial decade
Mary Pierse
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11
‘A hundred thousand welcomes’: food and wine as cultural signifiers
Brian Murphy
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12
Contemporary irish fiction and the indirect gaze
Neil Murphy
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13
‘Holes in the ground’: theatre as critic and conscience of Celtic Tiger Ireland
Vic Merriman
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14
‘Ship of fools’: the Celtic Tiger and poetry as social critique
Eóin Flannery
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15
Between modernity and marginality: Celtic Tiger cinema
Ruth Barton
- Conclusion
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End Matter
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