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BEYOND THE "GREEK CRISIS": HISTORIES, RHETORICS, POLITICS

Written By Smaro Boura on Sunday, July 22, 2012 | 11:58 AM



Guest Editor: Penelope Papailias (Department of History, Archaeology and Social Anthropology, University of Thessaly)
This forum focuses on the debt crisis in Greece (the 2010 EU/IMF “bailout” and subsequent austerity measures), as well as the various challenges that have been posed to the violence of neoliberal “adjustment.” The brief articles presented here have been solicited from observer-participants in the debates and protests, but also in the intimacies and banalities, defining everyday life in crisis Greece. The outlines of the crisis are widely known. Indeed, Greek society and its travails have never before been so visible to the global media eye. The aim of this forum is not so much to fill in this familiar outline of crisis with ethnographic detail as to trouble its parameters.
The first section Debt, Responsibility and “Reform” treats debt not as a statistical fact, but anthropologically as a complex discourse on morality, responsibility, obligation and reciprocity. Against the breathless synchronicity of “breaking news” and (endless) speculation on the denouement of the crisis, these pieces insist on historicizing and globalizing. Piercing the blatant Orientalist tropes dominating international and often domestic reporting, they plumb the social, political and economic forces that have led to the current impasse, but also the political efficacy of “crisis” itself in legitimating the agenda of “structural reform.”
The second section Precarity and Protest centers on the escalating violence of the crisis and the emergent politics of protest. The December 2008 revolt, which first galvanized world media attention on Greece, returns again and again in the analyses as a formative moment, which brought to the fore the malaise and anger of Greek youth (the “generation of 700…600…500 Euro…”) and inaugurated new forms of political action now prominent in the movement of Greek indignants (aganaktismenoi) that began in May 2011 (i.e., networking through social media, a transcending of established party politics), while also bringing into play a new grammar of political violence in unpredictable development today. These texts shed light on the production and normalization of an ever growing number of vulnerable, dispossessed and disposable subjects, but also on stunning moments of courageous confrontation with structures of subjugation and exploitation organized along axes of gender, class, age, race and ethnic hierarchy.
The final section Representations and Reverberations traverses the aforementioned subjects with an emphasis on the mediation of the crisis: the crisis as media event, citizen journalism, new modes of networking through social media, form-breaking film and theater. The texts seek to situate Greek experience in relation to the global reverberation of protest, riot, revolt and death from the Arab Spring and Spanish Indignados to the UK riots and Occupy Wall Street.
“The Trouble with Greece” reads the title of a recent New York Times editorial (10/7/2011), as if Greece could be “fixed” and all would be well again. As we prepare to launch this forum, with the Greek bond "haircut" "deal" faltering on news of a proposed national referendum, the European/global economy is roiling once again, revealing the shakiest of foundations. Whether Greece as the weakest link in the eurozone is a laboratory for neoliberal reform and violent repression of protest, or a think tank on the streets and in the squares for redefining democracy, it is clear that this crisis is not just “about Greece.” These entries bear the imprint of these uneasy times: the shock, anxiety, growing violence, despair, loss of security, fear, sheer exhaustion, the feeling of being suspended or maybe in free fall, but also the renewed intellectual energy, desire for a new horizon of the political, the promise of new forms of cosmopolitan solidarity, a sense of opening.

THE FORUM
DEBT, RESPONSIBILITY AND “REFORM”
Trickle-down Debt
Aimee Placas, College Year in Athens
Eat That!
Stathis Stasinos, blogger
The State of Exception as Precondition of Crisis
Leandros Kyriakopoulos, Panteio University
Harbingers of the “Greek Crisis”
Eleni Papagaroufali, Panteio University
The “Chinese-ification” of Greece
Tracey Rosen, University of Chicago

PRECARITY AND PROTEST
The Squared Constitution of Dissent
Neni Panourgiá, Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, USHMM
The Irregularities of Violence in Athens
Dimitris Dalakoglou, University of Sussex
REPRESENTATIONS AND REVERBERATIONS
Archive Trouble
Dimitris Papanikolaou, University of Oxford
Witnessing the Crisis
Penelope Papailias, University of Thessaly
The Greek Crisis for Dummies – A Visual Tour
Eleni Bubari, architect, social anthropology M.A.
Echoes of ‘Dead Ends’: Reflections on ‘Making Sense’
Eirini Avramopoulou, University of Cambridge

BACKGROUND LINKS
(All sites are in English or have a section in English.)
Occupied London
Updates from the Greek streets
Real Democracy
Blog from the peoples’ protests in Syntagma (Constitution) Square
The Press Project
Articles, video & live stream from an independent new media press collective
Greek Left Review
The crisis as seen from a left perspective

Contra Info

Counter-information from an anarchist standpoint
FAULTLINES: RACE, CLASS, GENDER
The Global Economic Crisis and Gender Relations: The Greek Case (Lois Woestman)
A report on the Greek crisis through a feminist lens
Πανελλαδική Απεργία Πείνας Μεταναστών
Blog from the immigrant hunger strike in Winter 2011

Τα παιδιά της γαλαρίας

A class-based critique of current events
IMAGE CREDITS
Top photo: Yiannis Biliris, "Photos from the Riots." via greekriots.com

Bottom photo: Petros Karadjias, "A riot policeman lashes out at a protesting drummer." via The Guardian.

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