posted on 2018-10-19, 10:27authored byDeirdre M. O'Loughlin, Isabelle T. Szmigin, Morven McEachern, Belem Barbosa, Kalipso Karantinou, María Eugenia Fernadez-Moya
In response to recent calls for further cross-disciplinary research on austerity and a deeper
sociological understanding of the impact and aftermath of the economic crisis on individuals and
societies, this article builds on extant austerity literature through an exploration of its effects on
European men. Informed by theories of liminality and rites of passage, this qualitative investigation
examines the experience of austerity from the perspective of 11 men through the three liminal stages
of separation, transition and reaggregation and investigates its impact on their identity, responsibilities
and expectations. Our findings reveal the negative experiences of alienation and outsiderhood
alongside positive experiences of communitas, solidarity and comradeship. The study provides a
nuanced understanding of modern male Europeans and their ‘rites of passage’ through austere times.