"Turn the Other Greek. How the Eurozone Crisis Changes the Image of Greeks and What Do Visual Representations of Greeks Tell us about European Identity?" . . . . . . "Turn the Other Greek. How the Eurozone Crisis Changes the Image of Greeks and What Do Visual Representations of Greeks Tell us about European Identity?"@en . "Turn the Other Greek. How the Eurozone Crisis Changes the Image of Greeks and What Do Visual Representations of Greeks Tell us about European Identity?"@en . "1"^^ . . "European identity, Greece, political cartoons, Self/Other, Eurozone crisis, discourse analysis, iconology"@en . "[E518C695A33A]" . "N" . "1"^^ . . . . "Chal\u00E1niov\u00E1, Daniela" . . . . . . "Perspectives - Review of International Affairs" . "1210-762X" . "RIV/26482789:_____/13:#0000359" . . . "RIV/26482789:_____/13:#0000359!RIV14-MSM-26482789" . "21" . "112045" . "1" . "This article analyses discursive practices of political cartoons and their contribution to construction of Greek and European identities in light of the European sovereign debt crisis. Goal of this article is to assess the emergence of Greeks as a significant Other to Europe and its implications for European identity. To this end, the article develops a theoretico-methodological framework that brings together theories of identity as a process and a project, and discourse analysis/iconology methodology tailored to political cartoon research. The article first tests for existence of a Europe-wide discourse of the crisis and Greeks, using qualitative methodology. Once existence of such discourse is established, the article goes on to examine the contents of this discourse, concluding that a Greek Other has indeed emerged through a process of differentiation, and continues to search for common interpretive frames and shared meanings that would point towards a common European identity. The political cartoon data sample comes from these countries: Austria, France, Slovakia and United Kingdom." . . . . "CZ - \u010Cesk\u00E1 republika" . "This article analyses discursive practices of political cartoons and their contribution to construction of Greek and European identities in light of the European sovereign debt crisis. Goal of this article is to assess the emergence of Greeks as a significant Other to Europe and its implications for European identity. To this end, the article develops a theoretico-methodological framework that brings together theories of identity as a process and a project, and discourse analysis/iconology methodology tailored to political cartoon research. The article first tests for existence of a Europe-wide discourse of the crisis and Greeks, using qualitative methodology. Once existence of such discourse is established, the article goes on to examine the contents of this discourse, concluding that a Greek Other has indeed emerged through a process of differentiation, and continues to search for common interpretive frames and shared meanings that would point towards a common European identity. The political cartoon data sample comes from these countries: Austria, France, Slovakia and United Kingdom."@en . "Turn the Other Greek. How the Eurozone Crisis Changes the Image of Greeks and What Do Visual Representations of Greeks Tell us about European Identity?" . "26"^^ .