MURAL - Maynooth University Research Archive Library



    Post-politics, crisis, and Ireland’s ghost estates


    O'Callaghan, Cian and Boyle, Mark and Kitchin, Rob (2014) Post-politics, crisis, and Ireland’s ghost estates. Political Geography, 42. pp. 121-133. ISSN 962-6298

    [img]
    Preview
    Download (2MB) | Preview


    Share your research

    Twitter Facebook LinkedIn GooglePlus Email more...



    Add this article to your Mendeley library


    Abstract

    This paper argues that the global economic recession provides an instructive point to reconsider recent theorisations of post-politics for two reasons. First, theories of the post-political can help us to understand the current neoliberal impasse, and second, current transformations provide us with an empirical basis to test the limits of these explanatory frameworks. While the resurgence of neoliberal policies, evidenced through the state-sponsored rescue of the financial sector and the introduction of harsh austerity measures in many countries, appear to confirm post-politics, various protest movements have testified to a concurrent re-politicisation of the economy. Furthermore, crises constitute periods of disruption to the discursive and symbolic order, which open a space for hegemonic struggle, however fleeting. We focus our analysis on Ireland's ‘ghost estates’ – residential developments left abandoned or unfinished after the property crash – and their treatment within mainstream print media. We argue that in the context of crash, the ‘ghost estate’ functioned as an ‘empty signifier’ through which hegemonic struggles over how to narrate, and thus re-inscribe, the event of the crisis were staged. We explore the double role played by ‘ghost estates’: firstly, as an opening for politics, and secondly, as a vehicle used to discursively contain the crisis through a neoliberal narrative of ‘excess’. We argue that our analysis offers an instructive example of how post-politicisation occurs as a process that is always contingent, contextual, and partial, and reliant on the cooption and coproduction of existing cultural signifiers with emergent narrations of crisis.

    Item Type: Article
    Keywords: Post-politics; Crisis; Media; Empty signifier; Discourse analysis; Ghost estates; Ireland;
    Academic Unit: Faculty of Social Sciences > Geography
    Item ID: 7269
    Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2014.07.006
    Depositing User: Prof. Rob Kitchin
    Date Deposited: 14 Sep 2016 14:11
    Journal or Publication Title: Political Geography
    Publisher: Elsevier
    Refereed: No
    URI:
    Use Licence: This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here

    Repository Staff Only(login required)

    View Item Item control page

    Downloads

    Downloads per month over past year

    Origin of downloads