The run of ourselves: Shame, guilt and confession in post-Celtic Tiger Irish media

This article examines the emergence of the themes of shame and guilt in Irish print and broadcast media in the wake of Ireland’s 2008 economic collapse. It considers how the potential search for explanation of the crisis as a manifestation of unregulated banking and development sectors was displaced...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of cultural studies 2018-05, Vol.21 (3), p.308-324
Hauptverfasser: Free, Marcus, Scully, Clare
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description This article examines the emergence of the themes of shame and guilt in Irish print and broadcast media in the wake of Ireland’s 2008 economic collapse. It considers how the potential search for explanation of the crisis as a manifestation of unregulated banking and development sectors was displaced onto a confessional discursive pattern in which emphasis was placed on rampant borrowing and consumption as reflective of collective narcissism and acquisitive greed. Hence the logic that ‘hubris’ led inevitably to a national fall from grace and the corresponding resurgence of postcolonial shame; and the interplay between cultural nationalist and neoliberal discourses of redemption through confession of guilt and disciplinary self-regulation as the purging of excess.
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source Access via SAGE; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Banking
Broadcasting
Celts
Confession
Consumption
Decolonization
Embarrassment
Guilt
Mass media
Narcissism
Nationalism
Neoliberalism
Regulation
Self control
Shame
title The run of ourselves: Shame, guilt and confession in post-Celtic Tiger Irish media
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