1. Chapter 1. Introduction: The discourses of the Greek crisis (by Hatzidaki, Ourania); 2. Section I. Greek crisis in the making; 3. Chapter 2. The dream that turned into a nightmare: Addressing the Greek voters long and right before the crisis (by Kostopoulou, Georgia); 4. Chapter 3. "Today I know, we know, that these sacrifices are heavy, but necessary": Constructing governmental knowledge on Greece's sovereign debt crisis (by Polymeneas, George); 5. Section II. Debating the Greek crisis; 6. Chapter 4. The chronicle of an ongoing crisis: Diachronic media representations of Greece and Europe in the Greek press (by Mitsikopoulou, Bessie); 7. Chapter 5. The "theory of the two extremes": A rhetorical topography for self- and other-identification across the Greek political spectrum (by Hatzidaki, Ourania); 8. Chapter 6. Constructed and ascribed identity of the Greek protesters in Syntagma Square: From "where we are" to "who they are" (by Goutsos, Dionysis); 9. Chapter 7. Taking stances on the Greek crisis: Evidence from Facebook interaction (by Georgalou, Mariza); 10. Chapter 8. "Crisis is written all over me": Greek songs in times of crisis (by Koutsoulelou, Stamatia); 11. Section III. Crisis, neo-nationalism and the extreme Right; 12. Chapter 9. "Tragic event" vs. "cowardly murder": A study of Golden Dawn's lexicogrammatical choices and discourse strategies (by Fragaki, Georgia); 13. Chapter 10. Golden Dawn in the media during the Greek crisis: Realities, allusions and illusions (by Mouka, Effie); 14. Chapter 11. Golden Dawn and the traits of extreme right-wing discourse amidst the Greek crisis (by Saridakis, Ioannis E.); 15. Chapter 12. "At night we'll come and find you, traitors": Cybercommunication in the Greek-Cypriot ultra-nationalist space (by Baider, Fabienne H.); 16. Chapter 13. Afterword: Making sense of the Greek crisis (by Goutsos, Dionysis)
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