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Home Truths: Property TV, Financialization, and the Housing Crisis in Contemporary Ireland
Author(s)
Date Issued
2021-01-01
Date Available
2025-01-06T16:01:04Z
Abstract
This article examines how a specific form of lifestyle programming indexes both national concerns and transnational financial trends as well as diffuse social fissures in Irish life. Emerging in the late 1990s amid a construction boom, Irish property television adapted and thrived through the subsequent post-2008 crash, the concomitant implementation of austerity policies and an ensuing housing crisis. This boom-to-bust cycle was precipitated by the financialization of property within Ireland, a process whereby housing and commercial property became embedded in transnational financial market cycles. Through an analysis of three key examples of the genre, this article argues that for the most part, Irish property television seeks to hold at bay anxieties generated by a growing wealth and income disparity in the state. While this programming displays an ideological commitment to the “investor subjects” of home-ownership, increasingly the concerns of those excluded from this version of the good life are evident.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Sage
Journal
Television and New Media
Volume
22
Issue
1
Start Page
65
End Page
82
Copyright (Published Version)
2020 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1527-4764
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
5 - Anthony McIntyre Home Truths TVNM - Final AM EDIT 08OCT.docx
Size
1.74 MB
Format
Unknown
Checksum (MD5)
b55661a2de15c8d667acab28367938b3
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