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Nineteenth-century outlaw Ned Kelly is perhaps Australia's most
famous historical figure. Ever since he went on the run in 1878 his
story has been repeated time and again, in every conceivable
medium. Although the value of his memory has been hotly contested -
and arguably because of this - he remains perhaps the main national
icon of Australia. Kelly's flamboyant crimes turned him into a
popular hero for many Australians during his lifetime and far
beyond: a symbol of freedom, anti authoritarianism, anti
imperialism; a Robin Hood, a Jesse James, a Che Guevara. Others
have portrayed him as a villain, a gangster, a terrorist. His
latest incarnation has been as WikiLeaks founder and fellow
Australian "cyber outlaw" Julian Assange. Despite the huge number
of representations of Kelly - from rampant newspaper reporting of
the events, to the iconic Sidney Nolan paintings, to a movie
starring Mick Jagger, to contemporary urban street art - this is
the first work to take this corpus of material itself as a subject
of analysis. The fascinating case of this young outlaw provides an
important opportunity to further our understanding of the dynamics
of cultural memory. The book explains the processes by which the
cultural memory of Ned Kelly was made and has developed over time,
and how it has related to formations and negotiations of national
identity. It breaks new ground in memory studies in the first place
by showing that cultural memories are formed and develop through
tangles of relations, what Basu terms memory dispositifs. In
introducing the concept of the memory dispositif, this volume
brings together and develops the work of Foucault, Deleuze, and
Agamben on the dispositif, along with relevant concepts from the
field of memory studies such as allochronism, colonial aphasia, and
multidirectionality, the memory site - especially as developed by
Ann Rigney - and Jan Assmann's figure of memory. Secondly, this
work makes important headway in our understanding of the
relationships between cultural memory and national identity, at a
time when matters of identity appear to be more urgent and fraught
than ever. In doing so, it shows that national identities are never
purely national but are always sub- and transnational. The Ned
Kelly memory dispositif has made complex and conflicting
contributions to constructions of national identity. Ever since his
outlawry, the identities invested in Kelly and those invested in
the Australian nation have, in a two-way dynamic, fused into and
strengthened each other, so that Kelly is in many ways a symbol for
the national identity. Kelly has come to stand for an
anti-establishment, working class, subaltern, Irish-inflected
national identity. At the same time he has come to represent and
enforce the whiteness, hyper-heterosexual masculinity and violence
of "Australianness". Basu shows that Kelly has therefore always
functioned in both radical and conservative ways, often both at
once: a turbulent, Janus-faced figure.
The Media and Austerity examines the role of the news media in
communicating and critiquing economic and social austerity measures
in Europe since 2010. From an array of comparative, historical and
interdisciplinary vantage points, this edited collection seeks to
understand how and why austerity came to be perceived as the only
legitimate policy response to the financial crisis for nearly a
decade after it began. Drawing on an international range of
contributors with backgrounds in journalism, politics, history and
economics, the book presents chapters exploring differing media
representations of austerity from UK, US and European perspectives.
It also investigates practices in financial journalism and
highlights the role of social media in reporting public responses
to government austerity measures. They reveal that, without a
credible and coherent alternative to austerity from the political
opposition, what had been an initial response to the consequences
of the financial crisis, became entrenched between 2010 and 2015 in
political discourse. The Media and Austerity is a clear and concise
introduction for students of journalism, media, politics and
finance to the connections between the media, politics and society
in relation to the public perception of austerity after the 2008
global financial crash.
This collection of essays brings together two major new
developments in cultural memory studies: firstly, the shift away
from static models of cultural memory, where the emphasis lies on
cultural products, in the direction of more dynamic models where
the emphasis lies instead on the cultural and social processes
involved in the ongoing production of shared views of the past; and
secondly, the growing interest in the role of the media, and their
role beyond that of mere storage, within these dynamics. The
specific concern of this collection is linking the use of media to
the larger socio-cultural processes involved in collective
memory-making. The focus rests in particular on two aspects of
media use: the basic dynamics of "mediation" and "remediation". The
key questions are: What role do media play in the production and
circulation of cultural memories? How do mediation, remediation and
intermediality shape objects and acts of cultural remembrance? How
can new, emergent media redefine or transform what is collectively
remembered? The essays of this collection focus on social,
historical, religious, and artistic media-memories. The authors
analyze the memory-making impact of news media, the mediation and
remediation of lieux de memoire, the medial representation of
colonial and postcolonial, of Holocaust and Second World War
memories, and finally the problematization of these very processes
in artistic media forms, such as novels and movies.
From Donald Trump, to Brexit and the rise of nationalist populism
across Europe, what role has the media played in shaping our
current political moment? Following the news coverage of a
decade-long crisis that includes the 2008 financial crash and the
Great Recession, the UK deficit, the eurozone crisis, austerity and
rising inequality, we see that coverage is suffering from an acute
amnesia about the policies that caused the crisis in the first
place. Rather than remembering its roots in the dynamics of 'free
market' capitalism, the media remains devoted to a narrative of
swollen public sectors, out-of-control immigration and benefits
cheats. How has history been so quickly rewritten, and what does
this mean for attempts to solve the economic problems? Going behind
the coverage, to decode the workings of media power, Basu shows
that without a rejection of neoliberal capitalism we'll be stuck in
an infinite cycle of crisis.
The Media and Austerity examines the role of the news media in
communicating and critiquing economic and social austerity measures
in Europe since 2010. From an array of comparative, historical and
interdisciplinary vantage points, this edited collection seeks to
understand how and why austerity came to be perceived as the only
legitimate policy response to the financial crisis for nearly a
decade after it began. Drawing on an international range of
contributors with backgrounds in journalism, politics, history and
economics, the book presents chapters exploring differing media
representations of austerity from UK, US and European perspectives.
It also investigates practices in financial journalism and
highlights the role of social media in reporting public responses
to government austerity measures. They reveal that, without a
credible and coherent alternative to austerity from the political
opposition, what had been an initial response to the consequences
of the financial crisis, became entrenched between 2010 and 2015 in
political discourse. The Media and Austerity is a clear and concise
introduction for students of journalism, media, politics and
finance to the connections between the media, politics and society
in relation to the public perception of austerity after the 2008
global financial crash.
This collection links the use of media to the larger socio-cultural
processes involved in collective memory-making. The focus in
particular is on'mediation' and 'remediation' as two fundamental
aspects of media use, and on the dynamics between them.Key
questions are: What role do media play in the production and
circulation of cultural memories? How do mediation, remediation and
intermediality shape objects and acts of cultural remembrance? How
can new, emergent media redefine or transform what is collectively
remembered? This book first appeared as a hardback volume in the De
Gruyter series Media and Cultural Memory Studies. With the present
book the original articles are reissued in an affordable paperback
edition for graduate students and scholars in the field of Media
and Memory Studies.
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