In Wild Tides: Media Infrastructure and Financial Crisis in Ireland (Duke University Press, 2026),
Patrick Brodie maps the shifting fortunes of the Irish economy before
the 2008 financial crisis up to 2020, outlining how the Irish state
moved from rampant and irresponsible financialized development to
incentivizing private media infrastructure and policy as instruments for
economic recovery. Brodie contends that while the Irish state’s
investment in creative and technological sectors of media was supposed
to bring resources back into the country and stabilize the economy, it
instead rendered the country even more vulnerable to future instability
and transferred wealth into the hands of multinational corporations.
Through ethnographic work and close engagement with the Irish state’s
policy and planning across a number of key media infrastructure sites,
Brodie unfolds the very real environmental and social impacts of
Ireland’s naturalized model of financialized, foreign direct
investment-led infrastructural development. Richly researched and
comprehensively argued, Wild Tides reveals the multifarious, unexpected ways that financialization reaches into the daily life of a nation.
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