
- 270 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
German economic crises from the past two hundred years have provoked diverse responses from journalists, politicians, scholars, and fiction writers. Among their responses, storylines have developed as proposals for reducing unemployment, improving workplace conditions, and increasing profitability when stock markets tumble, accompanied by inflation, deflation, and overwhelming debt. The contributors to Invested Narratives assess German-language economic crisis narratives from the interdisciplinary perspectives of finance, economics, political science, sociology, history, literature, and cultural studies. They interpret the ways German society has tried to comprehend, recover from, and avoid economic crises and in doing so widen our understanding of German economic debates and their influence on German society and the European Union.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction. Narrating Economics as Crisis
- Part I. Shaping Economic Knowledge from Historical Perspectives
- Part II. German Narratives of Work and Unemployment
- Part III. German “Exceptionalism” in Contemporary European Crisis Situations
- Part IV. The Tricky Question of Cause and Effect
- Index