第五章:“不只是为钱而哭泣”:繁荣与危机时期的冰岛与全球化

Kristín Loftsdóttir, M. Mixa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

冰岛经济崩溃期间的巨大金融损失导致了广泛的焦虑,加上共同的国家灾难和道德崩溃的深刻感觉(Bernburg, 2015;Olafsson, 2014)。强烈的背叛感表明,经济进程不仅与经济繁荣有关,而且还嵌入到更广泛的社会话语和民族认同感中(Schwegler, 2009)。我们从人类学和文化经济学的角度来探讨,冰岛人在经济崩溃后缺乏信任,是如何以一种不同的方式来看待冰岛在日益全球化的世界中所扮演的角色,以及冰岛人作为国家主体团结起来反对外国人的变化。冰岛的新自由化将该国纳入了全球机构和进程,并相信这些进程将自动对冰岛有利。此外,某种统一的冰岛主体感体现在“商业维京人”的形象上,这被视为冰岛民族整体利益的体现。在经济崩溃之后,对信任的背叛破坏了冰岛“一体性”的观念,从而破坏了“我们”冰岛人和“那些”外国人之间的明显区别。在我们的讨论中,我们追溯了冰岛人作为一个统一实体的概念的不同方式,并询问了这个概念在信任方面意味着什么。我们的研究表明,“统一的冰岛人”在创造信任感方面是如何发挥作用的,以及如何操纵和利用这种信任感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Chapter 5: ‘Not Just Crying About the Money’: Iceland and Globalisation During Boom and Crisis
Abstract The enormous financial losses during the economic crash in Iceland led to widespread anxieties, coupled with a deep sense of shared national disaster and moral collapse (Bernburg, 2015; Olafsson, 2014). The strong sense of betrayal indicates how economic processes are not only about economic prosperity, but are embedded also in wider societal discourses and a sense of national identity (Schwegler, 2009). We use perspectives from anthropology and cultural economics to ask how the lack of trust by the Icelandic population after the crash signals both a different way of visualising Iceland’s role within an increasingly global world and a changing sense of Icelanders as national subjects standing unified against foreigners. Iceland’s neo-liberalisation inserted the country into global institutions and processes with the faith that these processes would automatically be beneficial to Iceland. Furthermore, the sense of some kind of a unified Icelandic subject was manifested in the image of the ‘Business Viking’, which was seen as embodying the interest of the Icelandic nation as a whole. Following the economic crash, the betrayal of trust involved disrupting the idea of the ‘oneness’ of Iceland and thus, the sharp distinction between ‘us’ Icelanders and ‘those’ foreigners. In our discussion, we trace different ways of conceptualising this sense of Icelanders as a unified entity, asking what this notion means in terms of trust. Our research shows how the sense of ‘unified Icelanders’ was instrumental in creating the feeling of trust, and how it is possible to manipulate and appropriate that trust.
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