|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Pavlos RoufosPublisher: Reaktion Books Imprint: Reaktion Books ISBN: 9781780239859ISBN 10: 1780239858 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 13 August 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA careful and penetrating analysis of the cruel torment of Greece, and its background in the emerging global political economy, as the regimented capitalism of the early postwar period, with gains for much of the population, has been subjected to the assault of neoliberal globalization, with grim effects and threatening consequences. --Noam Chomsky This is an ambitious book, setting the scene for the calamity in Greece in the development of the European Union and the evolution of the broader crisis in the world economy. Its analysis of Syriza's response to the Greek crisis illustrates a key lesson: those who want to fight against austerity policies cannot rely upon a political party that wants to rescue capitalism. --Tony Norfield, author of The City: London and the Global Power of Finance This tract is worth reading and digesting because the Greek lesson must be learnt. --Socialist Standard This new book by the Greek activist Roufos is not about the European crisis and Greece, but about the Greek Crisis. It provides a glimpse into the political life of the Greek masses--not as helpless victims but as political actors--and what occurred in front of the doors of parliament and government buildings. . . . Roufos ticks all the important boxes in his political and economic analysis. What is unique is that this is merely a background for his account of what was happening in Greek politics and in the streets of Greek cities, especially Athens. . . . Very astute. --Mathew D. Rose Brave New Europe A careful and penetrating analysis of the cruel torment of Greece, and its background in the emerging global political economy, as the regimented capitalism of the early postwar period, with gains for much of the population, has been subjected to the assault of neoliberal globalization, with grim effects and threatening consequences. --Noam Chomsky This is an ambitious book, setting the scene for the calamity in Greece in the development of the European Union and the evolution of the broader crisis in the world economy. Its analysis of Syriza's response to the Greek crisis illustrates a key lesson: those who want to fight against austerity policies cannot rely upon a political party that wants to rescue capitalism. --Tony Norfield, author of The City: London and the Global Power of Finance Like no other book, A Happy Future is a Thing of the Past narrates the crisis from the heights of yield curves and debtloads to the street level of tear gas and self-help. Roufos's story is enlightening, harrowing, and, unfortunately, essential. --Quinn Slobodian, author of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism Seldom do Marxian analyses weave together politics and economics as seamlessly as Roufos in A Happy Future Is a Thing of the Past. . . . Roufos's command of the economic data is virtuosic. Making the dismal science . . . exciting to nonspecialists is no small task, but he works figures and statistics into his narrative without skipping a beat . . . [and] asks the right questions about what befell Greece since 2010. One need look no further for a comprehensive guide to the catastrophe of the present. --Marx and Philosophy Roufos has written a fine book. It is about the crisis of the world economy in Greece, the European rescue of particular German banks by taking money out of the pockets of the laboring classes in Greece, and it is about the beginnings of social self-organization and its demise in a context of party-political calculations of the electoral market. The book does not tell you what you want to hear. It tells you what you need to hear about the politics of debt and the courage of saying no to debt enforcement. Most importantly, it tells you about Syriza as a conventional political party that recognizes the revolt against misery as a political opportunity for government. --Werner Bonefeld, professor of politics, University of York, author of The Strong State and the Free Economy This is an ambitious book, setting the scene for the calamity in Greece in the development of the European Union and the evolution of the broader crisis in the world economy. Its analysis of Syriza's response to the Greek crisis illustrates a key lesson: those who want to fight against austerity policies cannot rely upon a political party that wants to rescue capitalism. --Tony Norfield, author of The City: London and the Global Power of Finance A careful and penetrating analysis of the cruel torment of Greece, and its background in the emerging global political economy, as the regimented capitalism of the early postwar period, with gains for much of the population, has been subjected to the assault of neoliberal globalization, with grim effects and threatening consequences. --Noam Chomsky In this study of the austerity measures imposed on Greece in 2010, the author claims that none of the goals the measures were intended to achieve--ensuring that Greece avoided default, improving its debt position, and restructuring its economy to avoid future crises--have actually been attained. -- Survival: Global Politics and Strategy This tract is worth reading and digesting because the Greek lesson must be learnt. -- Socialist Standard This new book by the Greek activist Roufos is not about the European crisis and Greece, but about the Greek Crisis. It provides a glimpse into the political life of the Greek masses--not as helpless victims but as political actors--and what occurred in front of the doors of parliament and government buildings. . . . Roufos ticks all the important boxes in his political and economic analysis. What is unique is that this is merely a background for his account of what was happening in Greek politics and in the streets of Greek cities, especially Athens. . . . Very astute. --Mathew D. Rose Brave New Europe In A Happy Future Is a Thing of the Past, University of Kassel-based researcher Pavlos Roufos integrates both via a Marxist framework in which both national and international institutions are pieces in capitalism's social machinery, which predictably generates upheavals and injustices. Roufos' aim is to understand the Greek crisis in its specifics, but also in its generality, as a series of events that shed light on social patterns in other times and places beyond his book's immediate scope. He succeeds. -- Science & Society Like no other book, A Happy Future is a Thing of the Past narrates the crisis from the heights of yield curves and debtloads to the street level of tear gas and self-help. Roufos's story is enlightening, harrowing, and, unfortunately, essential. --Quinn Slobodian, author of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism Seldom do Marxian analyses weave together politics and economics as seamlessly as Roufos in A Happy Future Is a Thing of the Past. . . . Roufos's command of the economic data is virtuosic. Making the dismal science . . . exciting to nonspecialists is no small task, but he works figures and statistics into his narrative without skipping a beat . . . [and] asks the right questions about what befell Greece since 2010. One need look no further for a comprehensive guide to the catastrophe of the present. -- Marx and Philosophy Author InformationPavlos Roufos has been active in Greece's social movements since the 1990s and has written on Greece and the economic crisis for the Brooklyn Rail (New York) and Jungle World (Berlin). He has worked as a film editor and is currently a researcher on German economic policy at the University of Kassel. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |