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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.
Acknowledgements

Introduction

1. Crash

2. Deficit

3. Slump

4. Eurocrisis

5. Inequality

6. Curing Media Amnesia

Glossary

References

Index
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20 avril 2018

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0

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9781786802767

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English

Media Amnesia
Media Amnesia
Rewriting the Economic Crisis
Laura Basu
First published 2018 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright Laura Basu 2018
The right of Laura Basu to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 3790 6 Hardback
ISBN 978 0 7453 3789 0 Paperback
ISBN 978 1 7868 0275 0 PDF eBook
ISBN 978 1 7868 0277 4 Kindle eBook
ISBN 978 1 7868 0276 7 EPUB eBook
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
Typeset by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England
Simultaneously printed in the United Kingdom and United States of America
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Crash
2. Deficit
3. Slump
4. Eurocrisis
5. Inequality
6. Curing Media Amnesia
Glossary
References
Index
Acknowledgements
This project was funded by a Marie Sk odowska-Curie research fellowship supported by Justin Lewis at Cardiff University. My thanks to Justin and to all my colleagues at Cardiff, especially my office mate Joe Cable. I m also grateful for the institutional support I ve received from the Institute for Cultural Inquiry, Utrecht University, the Department of Media and Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London and the Media, Economics, and Entrepreneurship program at the University of Southern California s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.
I want to thank all those who have contributed to this project, by reading chapters or proposals, giving important advice or helping me develop my ideas, especially: Ann Rigney, Astrid Erll, Nello Cristianini, Natalie Fenton, Des Freedman, James Curran, Danielle Rhodes, Fiona May, Christopher H. Smith, Chris Smith, Steve Schifferes, Christian Fuchs, Jonathan Hardy and Marko Ampuja.
A huge thank you to all the journalists who agreed to be interviewed and so generously gave of their time to share their insights and experiences. Likewise the economists, political scientists and activists who helped answer my difficult questions. And to my publisher, Pluto Press, especially my editor Anne Beech.
Thanks to my friends, either for letting me talk endlessly about my work or for providing much needed distraction - both types of support have been essential. As always, my wonderful family has been with me every step of the way - the LA crew: Jay, Tamara, Alita and Asha, and my unstoppable parents, Ann and Dipak Basu. Most of all, I want to thank the amazing giant, Erik Ros, who has been my partner on this adventure, and whose contribution to this book is incalculable.
Introduction
On 15 September 2007, the UK experienced its first run on a bank since 1866. Exactly a year later, Lehman Brothers filed the biggest bankruptcy in history. Over the course of 2008, global stock markets plunged nearly 50 per cent, wiping out 35 trillion in financial assets (McNally 2011: 13). Eight major US banks collapsed, as did more than twenty across Europe, many of which were taken over by governments. The entire edifice of the market system seemed to be crumbling before our eyes. Even the Financial Times ran a series on The Future of Capitalism , declaring that The world of the three past decades is gone (quoted in McNally 2011: 14). A decade later, we are still feeling the effects of the banking meltdown, which has cost an estimated 13 trillion in bank bailouts (Blyth 2013: 5), and 50 trillion in asset values worldwide (Harvey 2011: 6). The economic crisis has now morphed into a political crisis, as authoritarian populist figures marshal people s anger and fear over their precarious finances into nationalist projects.
It is perhaps difficult to remember the sense of sheer panic and confusion in the initial stages of the crisis, swiftly followed by fury at a set of people who had styled themselves as masters of the universe and reaped untold rewards creating what had turned out to be financial weapons of mass destruction (in the words of master of the universe, Warren Buffett). We seem to have grown accustomed to a pervading sense of economic and now political turmoil. Not only that, we seem to have gotten used to the idea that it is we, the ordinary people, who will pay for it, via cuts to public services and lower incomes. Many now even believe that it was public spending that caused the crisis in the first place. It is widely thought that Labour lost the 2015 UK election partly because voters believed it had crashed the economy by spending too much public money, and was not committed enough to tackling the deficit through austerity. Some blame the poor or immigrants for the problems. We seem to have forgotten the origins of the banking meltdown, and its roots in the wider economic system. This is remarkable, not only because of the historical reality of the financial crisis, but because that crisis was all over the news at the time. How has history been so quickly rewritten, what role has the media played in rewriting it, and what effects might this have had for thinking about solutions to the economic problems?
These are the kinds of questions this book will address. It follows the UK news coverage of the crisis from the run on Northern Rock in 2007 until the present day, encompassing the global financial meltdown, the Great Recession, the UK deficit, the eurozone crisis, and falling living standards and rising inequality. It traces the twists and turns by which the media have taken us from a crisis produced by a form of capitalism that has created untold riches for those at the top to a situation in which the majority of people are struggling while those responsible have actually increased their share of global wealth.
In particular, it explores the phenomenon of media amnesia , which has been created purposely by politicians and sections of the press, and is often reproduced passively by the impartial broadcasters and liberal press. As the crisis has mutated over time, it has been continually reframed in the media. With each reframing, certain information is forgotten and other information is added, so that the crisis narrative is fluid, malleable and difficult to grasp in its entirety. It will be shown that this amnesia, which entails the media forgetting its own very recent coverage, has helped trap us in a neoliberal groundhog day. It has legitimised the implementation of the same kinds of policies that helped cause the crisis in the first place. These policies not only hit the poorest hardest but actually transfer resources upwards, from the 99 per cent to the 1 per cent. The strange non-death of neoliberalism (Crouch 2011) since the 2008 crash has been widely observed (Mirowski 2013; Sum and Jessop 2013). This book explores the role of the media in this non-death.
There are three primary characteristics of the media coverage that contribute to media amnesia: a lack of historical explanation; an overly narrow range of perspectives privileging elite views; and a lack of global context. Each of these threads will be teased out through the following chapters. Media amnesia is not limited to the coverage of the economic crisis - it can be found in all kinds of reporting (the reporting of the Iraq War springs to mind), and is a defining condition of today s media. The economic crisis provides a rare opportunity to examine media amnesia over a time frame of several years continuously - it is one of the only phenomena that has stayed in the media eye constantly for that long a period. The workings of media amnesia in relation to a crisis that has become the backdrop of life for millions is thus the subject of this book.
MEDIA AMNESIA AND THE CRISIS
For some critical theorists, forgetting is a key feature of capitalism. Fredric Jameson, in his reading of Karl Marx, describes capital as a machine constantly breaking down, repairing itself not by solving its local problems, but by mutation onto larger and larger scales, its past always punctually forgotten. . . (quoted in de Cock et al. 2012: 87). Prichard and Mir point out that this forgetfulness, a collective absent mindedness , lies at the heart of the economic regime that creates the conditions for ever more frequent and intensive crises. De Cock et al. argue that it is this forgetfulness that has allowed us to return to business as usual after 2008 (de Cock et al . 2012: 87). Henry A. Giroux (2014) writes of the violence of organized forgetting , which has been perpetrated in the US by a range of institutions and sustains an increasingly destructive form of capitalism by short-circuiting critical thought.
Part of the reason capitalism creates amnesia is that the search for profit - capitalism s driving force - leads to the constant speeding up of our experience of time: what David Harvey (1989) has called time-space compression . Companies are always searching for ways to produce more and faster. The current era has taken this acceleration to new levels, with finance capital s real-time transactions on the one hand and the just-in-time supply chains of transnational corporations on the other (Hope 2011). For social theorist Hartmut Rosa (2015), we are experiencing acceleration in multiple spheres of life, and this affects the ways we relate to each other and the world. For many, the speeding up of time under capitalism has wrought havoc on our ability to remember.
It is media, in the sense of information and communication technologies (ICTs), that have enabled the instantaneous transactions of finance and the transnational supply chains that are behind this acceleration (Hope 2011). In turn, media, including news media, have been profoundly affecte

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