scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Journal ArticleDOI

‘In the end you adapt to anything’: responses to narratives of resilience and entrepreneurship in post-recession Spain

22 Aug 2021-European Journal of Cultural Studies (SAGE Publications)-pp 136754942110341
TL;DR: ResResilience is a concept that has become popular during the years of economic crisis and post-recession. Contemporary citizens are expected to be flexible and resilient as discussed by the authors. But resilience does not guarantee the ability to bounce back from hardship
Abstract: Resilience – the ability to bounce back from hardship – is a concept that has become popular during the years of economic crisis and post-recession. Contemporary citizens are expected to be flexibl...

Summary (3 min read)

Introduction

  • After the fall of Lehman Brothers in 2008 and the subsequent financial collapse, what is known as the Great Recession spread around most Western countries.
  • Resilience is presented as a fundamental value when coping with (and taking advantage of) the precariousness and uncertainty in post-recessionary Western societies.
  • Politicians, athletes and self-help gurus use it’.
  • This article examines how citizens in post-recession Spain, where the crisis is officially over even though its consequences are still palpable,1 respond to the discourses and representations which have populated the Spanish media promoting the value of resilience, change and adaptability.

The imaginaries of the economic crisis

  • As international scholarship has highlighted, popular culture has played an important role in portraying and legitimizing austerity imaginaries and neoliberal values.
  • These stories, which highlighted the crisis’s dramatic consequences on Spanish citizens, were countered with advertisements that romanticized them, urging Spaniards to adapt to the precarious reality and discover the value of the ‘little things’ (Ruiz Collantes and Sanchez-Sanchez, 2019).
  • In Spain, where the welfare state was traditionally legitimized (García, 2010), these formats introduced new imaginaries that further developed after 2008.
  • They are seen in local adaptations of Anglo-American formats such as Esta casa era una ruina (Extreme Makeover: Home Edition), El jefe infiltrado (Undercover Boss) and Millonario anónimo (Secret Millionaire), as well as the Spanish show Entre todos (TVE1 2013-14), in which people facing difficulties asked other Spaniards for help.

On resilience

  • Resilience -the capacity to recover quickly from difficulties- has been a key concept in the discourses about the economic crisis, especially in relation to the ways of coping with it.
  • Resilience ‘implies the ability to withstand setbacks or even the capacity for individuals to use their problems as an impetus for positive change,’ such that it is often presented positively, since ‘it is dynamic and suggests agency’ (Harrison, 2013: 99).
  • Different authors have pointed out that in analyses of individuals’ this role by caring for themselves (Gill and Ogard, 2018; Harrison, 2013; Jensen, 2016).
  • This discourse has only magnified since the economic crisis, as it has been expanded and idealized in very diverse fields such as politics, psychology, education, celebrity culture and creative labor (Barudy, 2016; Conor, 2014; Gill and Orgard, 2018, Gorin and Dubied, 2011).
  • Not only is entrepreneurship portrayed as a way to respond to the crisis, as the authors have seen in the previous section, but the crisis (and the more precarious environment) is also framed as an opportunity to help Spaniards to become more entrepreneurial and thus reinvent themselves.

Methodology

  • This article presents the results of a research project whose objective is to identify the values conveyed by popular culture during the years of the economic crisis in Spain and to see how citizens respond to these values and representations.
  • The choice of focus groups as the research technique reflects a desire to examine citizens’ discourse from a qualitative viewpoint, that is, without the goal of representativeness, as other techniques can provide, yet with the possibility of detecting significant differences among social groups and obtaining elaborate discourses (Bryman, 2008).
  • In both cases, the authors studied how neoliberalism and its associated values (resilience, austerity, entrepreneurship, selfdiscipline, meritocracy, individualism, flexibility, adaptation to change) have contributed to generating a predominant narrative about the crisis, and how this narrative has also permeated popular culture texts (as explained in previous sections).
  • Based on this work, the authors created four written short stories that encapsulated the main features of the narratives previously studied.
  • (MCW 2) Hardship is also presented by some participants (both middle and working class) as a chance to reconsider your life course, thus evoking the neoliberal ideal of the reflective worker who has the capacity to forge their own path (Atkinson, 2010): P4: I mean, I’ve seen human beings adapt to any adversity or change.

P5 [agrees]

  • Or just like dinosaurs you simply disappear (WCW 2) The participants assume that the environment cannot be changed by either the characters in the stories or the citizens in society today, also known as P3.
  • The working-class participants’ emphasis on adaptation to change can be seen as a veiled complaint about their situation.
  • But it’s almost more a cultural problem than… sometimes people are really afraid of changes, because we’re taught to… not to do it, I mean, security, security, security.
  • This stands in contrast to the worker who is ‘complacent’ due to the ‘privileges’ they have gotten from the existing job protections, which is based on the imaginary of ‘Spanish workers as immobile, slow, and left behind by progress’ (Fernández Rodriguez and Martínez Lucio, 2012: 326).
  • And now, it turns out you’ve lost your job, you have two children, a mortgage, (…) they’ve embargoed P3: and they’ve reinvented themselves P4: and they’ve reinvented themselves because they’ve opened a bakery, or the woman has started taking in sewing, or they’ve gone to live with their parents until things get better.

Conclusions

  • During the recession and post-recession years, popular culture in Spain has conveyed narratives from the epic of adaptability, merging concepts such as resilience, flexibility, self-reinvention, entrepreneurship and a romanticization of austerity.
  • Working-class participants were less accepting of these discourses, while defending the ability to adapt to difficult situations as an important virtue.
  • As Alonso et al. (2011) point out, before austerity was appropriated by the neoliberal discourse in Spain, there was an ‘ethic of austerity in the working class’.
  • Since the authors also found some instances where working-class participants mixed notions of survival, adaptation and resilience with a more direct appeal to entrepreneurship, they should ask whether neoliberalism’s appropriation of austerity and resilience has given it an additional capacity to connect with this social group.
  • Funding Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [grant number CSO2014-56830-P].

Did you find this useful? Give us your feedback

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

1
This is the Accepted Manuscript of an article published by SAGE in the European
Journal of Cultural Studies on August 22, 2021 and available online:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/13675494211034168
‘In the end you adapt to anything’: Responses to narratives of resilience and
entrepreneurship in post-recession Spain
Mercè Oliva, Óliver Pérez-Latorre and Reinald Besalú
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain
Abstract: Resilience the ability to bounce back from hardship is a concept that has
become popular during the years of economic crisis and post-recession. Contemporary
citizens are expected to be flexible, have a positive attitude, and take care of themselves
in a context of heightened inequality and precarity. The objective of this article is to
analyze how citizens in post-recession Spain respond to media representations that
prescribe these values. Eight focus groups were held with middle- and working-class men
and women (a total of 62 participants) who discussed four short stories written by the
researchers which condensed the main concepts found in media narratives studied
previously (including TV series, reality TV, advertisements, video games and celebrity
culture). The results of our analysis show that participants tended to praise change and
adaptability. The ‘complacent citizen’, who seeks security and refuses to adapt to the
current precarious and unstable environments, emerges as a ‘bad citizen’, and security
and stability are pathologized. There were differences between the middle and working-
class groups: while the former clearly adhered to the neoliberal discourse that sees

2
flexibility and self-improvement as a moral obligation, the latter showed a more
ambivalent response to these discourses.
Keywords: resilience, neoliberalism, Great Recession, economic crisis, class,
entrepreneurship, flexibility, precariousness, popular culture, audience
Introduction
After the fall of Lehman Brothers in 2008 and the subsequent financial collapse, what is
known as the Great Recession spread around most Western countries. The economic crisis
was particularly severe in Spain, where its effects lasted for years, with a rise in
unemployment from 8.57% in 2007 up to a peak of 25.73% in 2013, along with alarming
numbers of home evictions and increasing poverty and inequality (Angulo Egea, 2018).
The working class in particular experienced higher unemployment rates and income
losses (Martínez, 2014).
After 2010, the Spanish government began to implement austerity measures and
legislative reforms to increase the job market’s ‘flexibility’ (Fernández Rodriguez and
Martínez Lucio, 2012; López Andreu, 2017). After the 2012 bailout, these policies were
further tightened with pressure from European institutions (Mateos and Penadés 2013).
These measures were legitimized by a deepening of neoliberal discourses, which depicted
austerity as the only sensible policy, arguing ‘that you cannot spend more than you earn’,
an idea repeated 93 times in the speeches by Mariano Rajoy (Spain’s prime minister from
2011 to 2018) (Borriello, 2017: 248). Moreover, Spain was included in the acronym PIGS
(Portugal, Italy/Ireland, Greece and Spain), which was connected with a ‘narrative [that]
suggests that the origins of the Eurozone crisis are to be found in the fiscal profligacy of
PIGS countries, particularly southern European ones, which are accustomed to live

3
beyond their means and work less than other Europeans’ (Ntampoudi, 2014: 6). From this
vantage point, the crisis is framed as a moral corrective which should facilitate the
creation of entrepreneurial, autonomous citizens.
In this context, resilience is presented as a fundamental value when coping with (and
taking advantage of) the precariousness and uncertainty in post-recessionary Western
societies. As Barudy (2016) claims, resilience ‘is a fashionable word. Politicians, athletes
and self-help gurus use it’. In a broad array of spheres, from popular culture to politics,
the idea that hardship is an opportunity to grow and better oneself has flourished and
merged with other core neoliberal values, such as entrepreneurship, flexibility and self-
improvement.
This article examines how citizens in post-recession Spain, where the crisis is officially
over even though its consequences are still palpable,
1
respond to the discourses and
representations which have populated the Spanish media promoting the value of
resilience, change and adaptability. Although there has been a surge in studies on how the
recession and austerity culture have been represented in the media across different
national contexts in recent years, how audiences respond to these narratives remains
understudied.
The imaginaries of the economic crisis
As international scholarship has highlighted, popular culture has played an important role
in portraying and legitimizing austerity imaginaries and neoliberal values. The economic
crisis has been framed via metaphors such as natural catastrophe or accident (Bickes et
al., 2014), ‘eliminating any responsibility’ and ‘instilling fear and resignation in the face
of what is depicted as inevitable and universal’ (Cortés de los Ríos, 2010: 85). Recent

4
post-apocalyptic narratives (Pérez-Latorre et al., 2019; Boyle and Mrozowsky, 2014;
Sugg, 2015) also draw from these metaphors, while advocating individualized solutions
and somewhat romanticizing austerity. This romanticization of austerity can also be found
in ‘retreatist’ narratives (Negra and Tasker, 2014). Even though these imaginaries can be
seen as avowals of anti-consumer values, claiming that there is more to life than material
wealth (Bramall, 2013), they are often used to ‘reify (...) the new normal of deteriorated
working conditions’ (Kidder, 2016: 316) and morally justify austerity policies. Popular
culture encourages individuals to ‘absorb greater risk and take up positions of heightened
precarity’ (Negra and McIntyre, 2020: 76), and to become entrepreneurial and
independent individuals who scrimp and save (Allen et al., 2015).
In Spain, popular culture during the years of the crisis consists of an amalgam of national
and international (mostly Anglo-American) fiction and non-fiction contents, as well as
local adaptations of international TV formats. Thus, it shares traits with what has been
identified in international scholarship while having its own particularities.
The crisis was portrayed as an equalizer, a catastrophe that affected everyone equally,
hiding the increasing inequality; this is evidenced in comedies such as the TV series La
que se avecina, Con el culo al aire and Aída; the films La chispa de la vida and 5 metros
cuadrados (Ruiz-Muñoz, 2015; Allbritton, 2014); narratives of ‘broke celebrities’ (Oliva
and Pérez-Latorre, 2020); and Anglo-American and Spanish post-apocalyptic stories (TV
series such as The Walking Dead and El barco and video games such as The Last of Us).
Moreover, these narratives fostered the idea that you have to do ‘whatever it takes’ to
survive (such as take any job without complaining) (Pérez-Latorre, 2019, Oliva and
Pérez- Latorre, 2020).

5
The consequences of the crisis were also depicted in the press through the life stories of
three figures: the unemployed, the evicted and the precarious young adult forced to
emigrate to the prosperous North (Angulo Egea, 2018, 2020; Labrador Méndez, 2012).
These stories, which highlighted the crisis’s dramatic consequences on Spanish citizens,
were countered with advertisements that romanticized them, urging Spaniards to adapt to
the precarious reality and discover the value of the ‘little things (Ruiz Collantes and
Sanchez-Sanchez, 2019).
Likewise, during the crisis years, contestation against welfare cuts (Castells, 2012)
appeared alongside media texts that introduced neoliberal imaginaries which fostered
individualized ways of coping with the precarious context: from individual
entrepreneurship to charity and solidarity among Spaniards. Entrepreneurship as a value
was not introduced in the Spanish imaginary until a few years before the crisis started.
From 2006 to 2010, successful local adaptations of international reality TV formats such
as Supernanny or Soy lo que como (Honey, We’re Killing the Kids) (Oliva, 2012)
promoted the creation of autonomous, entrepreneurial and self-governing citizens,
legitimizing a neoliberal ‘reinvention of government’ that began in the UK and the US in
the mid-1990s (Biressi and Nunn, 2008; Ouellette and Hay, 2008). In Spain, where the
welfare state was traditionally legitimized (García, 2010), these formats introduced new
imaginaries that further developed after 2008.
During the crisis, the figure of the young (male) entrepreneur is openly praised in Spanish
news, factual entertainment and reality TV (Código Emprende) as a virtuous citizen: ‘if
there are no jobs available, they invent them’. Also, local adaptations of Anglo-American
talent shows such as La voz (The Voice) and Master Chef and popular TV series reinforced
these values. For example, the series Velvet and El tiempo entre costuras portrayed
entrepreneurial women who achieved upward social mobility thanks to their ‘talent (…)

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the impact of digital corporate social responsibility (CSR) on social entrepreneurship, organizational resilience and competitive intelligence during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) crisis.
Abstract: PurposeThis study examines the impact of digital corporate social responsibility (CSR) on social entrepreneurship, organizational resilience and competitive intelligence during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) crisis. It also examines the impact of competitive intelligence on social entrepreneurship and organizational resilience.Design/methodology/approachData were collected from telecommunication companies in Jordan with a sample of 223 managers, using Smart-PLS for analysis and testing the research model and hypotheses.FindingsThe results reveal a significant impact of digital CSR on social entrepreneurship. They show that digital CSR significantly impacts organizational resilience. The findings also indicate a significant role of digital CSR in competitive intelligence. This study shows that social entrepreneurship significantly impacts organizational resilience. The results also confirm the impact of competitive intelligence on social entrepreneurship. Finally, the results confirm that competitive intelligence significantly impacts organizational resilience.Originality/valueThis study provides valuable academic and practical insights into digital CSR practices, social entrepreneurship and how to support organizational resilience during crises.

1 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors focus on project-based theatre actors in Italy and consider their narratives of success, unsuccess, and future expectations to shed light on how entrepreneurial projects are negotiated in neoliberal cultural work.
Abstract: This article contributes to contemporary debates on self-entrepreneurship in cultural work by focusing on project-based theatre actors in Italy. Drawing on in-depth interviews, the study considers performing artists’ narratives of success, unsuccess, and future expectations to shed light on how entrepreneurial projects are negotiated in neoliberal cultural work. The article expands current research by considering how self-entrepreneurial projects are lived out in insecure working environments, taking into account a geographical area and a creative sector often overlooked by studies of creative labour. In a context where precariousness is normalised, actors’ discourses point at the emergence of disaffection towards neoliberal entrepreneurial ideals of autonomy and competition and to the loss of a progressive idea of biographical projects. The research highlights that an ongoing status of insecurity can mine optimistic and entrepreneurial orientations, questioning the sustainability of neoliberal ethos of work as a future-oriented project in times of enhanced insecurity.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a proyecto de exploración empirico cuyo objetivo principal ha been to reconstruir el mapa de necesidades and practicas de consumo in Espana, with el fin of valorar the impacto of the crisis on these same sectors.
Abstract: La situacion de crisis economica que se ha instalado en Espana desde hace mas de dos anos esta teniendo efectos significativos en las formas de relacion de la ciudadania con el consumo que pueden ir mas alla de la caida de las cifras de ventas. A ello se suma una preocupacion creciente por la sostenibilidad de los patrones consumistas actuales y el surgimiento de pautas de consumo responsable que, con la profundizacion de la crisis economica, se enfrentan a nuevas oportunidades y riesgos. El articulo que presentamos aqui se basa en un proyecto de investigacion empirico cuyo objetivo principal ha sido el de reconstruir el mapa de necesidades y practicas de consumo en Espana, con el fin de valorar el impacto de la crisis en las mismas. Para ello, nuestra perspectiva ha sido la de ahondar en estas complejidades no desde el analisis de las cifras sino del de los discursos, dentro de una investigacion sociologica de caracter cualitativo cuya metodologia sera la de los grupos de discusion. En el trabajo presentado, se discutiran los resultados del analisis de los mismos, diseccionando la relacion que, en dichos grupos, se ha establecido entre el hecho y acto del consumo y unos ciertos limites dados que, en el momento previo a la crisis, han sido sobrepasados, generando un peculiar discurso cuyo eje principal es el de la culpabilidad.

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
06 Mar 2019
TL;DR: Ruiz et al. as mentioned in this paper identified three dominant prototypical narratives that join together around two ideological trends: nationalism and neoliberalism, and neutralized potentially critical elements of neoliberalism by linking them with the discourses of political and economic elites.
Abstract: Narrativas de la crisis economica: el nacionalneoliberalismo en la publicidad espanola (2008-2017) Narrativas da crise economica: o neoliberalismo nacional na publicidade espanhola (2008-2017) Advertising, in addition to spreading discourses about products and brands, creates specific representations of society. Considering the economic crisis that Spain has been experiencing since 2008, this research aims to identify the narratives that have been produced about it in Spanish advertising between 2008 and 2017. Using a questionnaire administered to 45 advertising professionals in Spain, 31 spots that directly refer to the crisis have been identified. A qualitative content analysis inspired by narrative semiotics has been performed on these spots. Results show three dominant prototypical narratives that join together around two ideological trends: nationalism and neoliberalism. There are no story lines about the causes of the crisis or those responsible for it, while its solution is transferred to citizens, who must overcome it through cognitive and emotional changes and by being supportive with their kin. Those potentially critical elements of neoliberalism are neutralized by linking them with the discourses of political and economic elites. Para citar este articulo / to reference this article / para citar este artigo Ruiz, F. X. y Sanchez-Sanchez, C. (2019). Narrativas de la crisis economica: el nacionalneoliberalismo en la publicidad espanola (2008-2017). Palabra Clave, 22 (2), e2228. DOI: 10.5294/pacla.2019.22.2.8 Recibido: 05/03/2018 Aceptado: 06/11/2018

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the most popular video games in recent years contribute to the construction of the social imaginary of the Great Recession, and the discursive struggles over the definition of crucial aspects of social imaginary are discussed.
Abstract: How do the most popular video games in recent years contribute to the construction of the social imaginary of the Great Recession? The discursive struggles over the definition of crucial aspects of...

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Nov 2012
TL;DR: The authors identify and interrogate the meanings that "austerity" has in contemporary culture, and recall the contingency of the processes through which these meanings have been consolidated, a task that is all the more urgent, I suggest, when it feels like one prevailing signification has already ‘won out’.
Abstract: The prevailing description of our times as an ‘age of austerity’ has hardened into an axiom with extraordinary rapidity. Focusing on contemporary popular and consumer culture in Britain, this article makes a contribution to the task of subjecting the discourse of ‘austerity’ to the consideration it properly demands. I identify and interrogate the meanings that ‘austerity’ has in contemporary culture, and recall the contingency of the processes through which these meanings have been consolidated, a task that is all the more urgent, I suggest, when it feels like one prevailing signification has already ‘won out’. The article is organized around the discussion of three dominant meanings of austerity: austerity as ‘responsible politics’, deficit reduction and coalition government policy; austerity as the ‘other’ that defines left-political struggle; and austerity as ‘austerity chic’. The latter points to a conception of austerity as object of desire, an element which I develop and use to question the currently dominant critical position in left-cultural politics, the position of being ‘anti-austerity’.

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the effects of changes in employment regulation in Spain on individual labour market trajectories and showed how these reforms have reinforced previous existing trends towards greater flexibility and weaker employment protection and led to a shift in the position of work in society.
Abstract: Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the effects of changes in employment regulation in Spain on individual labour market trajectories. It is well known that the Spanish labour market has been strongly hit by the 2007 recession. Furthermore, after 2010 and in the benchmark of “austerity”, several reforms were implemented to further flexibilise employment regulation. At the same time, public sector budgets suffered severe cutbacks, that impacted working conditions and prospects of public sector workers. These reforms were implemented by different governments and substantially changed previous existing patterns of employment. This paper explains how these reforms have reinforced previous existing trends towards greater flexibility and weaker employment protection and how they lead to a shift in the position of work in society. Design/methodology/approach The emerging patterns that these changes provoked are illustrated thorough data from narrative biographies of workers affected by a job loss or a downgrading of working conditions. The workers of the sample had relatively stable positions and careers and were affected by changes that substantially modified their paths. Findings The paper shows how reforms have expanded work and employment insecurities and have broken career paths. It demonstrates how the reforms have weakened the position of work and organised labour in society and how, when institutional supports are jeopardised, the capacity to plan and act is harassed by the traditional social inequalities. Originality/value The paper enhances the knowledge about the impact of institutional changes by analysing their effects in individual working lives by means of narrative biographies.

9 citations

Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

The objective of this article is to analyze how citizens in post-recession Spain respond to media representations that prescribe these values. Eight focus groups were held with middleand working-class men and women ( a total of 62 participants ) who discussed four short stories written by the researchers which condensed the main concepts found in media narratives studied previously ( including TV series, reality TV, advertisements, video games and celebrity culture ). 

Nevertheless, these discourses coexist with a defense of welfare and public benefits and a harsh criticism of the consequences of past austerity policies, which shows the complexities of this concept and the need to further research it.