Raise Your Soul by Yanis Varoufakis review – an intimate history of Greece

The Guardian 1 min read 7 hours ago

<p>The colourful former minister uses the lives of five female relatives to tell the story of postwar Greek politics</p><p>Yanis Varoufakis entered public consciousness as the academic in a leather jacket who briefly became Greece’s finance minister in 2015. For having the temerity to lecture his creditors on the folly of austerity, he was treated as the villain of the piece. Yet for all his swagger, he has always been a surprisingly sober thinker: Keynesian at heart, internationalist in instinct, he has built a reputation as a critic of dollar hegemony and Fortress Europe, a defender of both the precariat and refugees. You wonder if he’s experienced some schadenfreude in watching Germany’s economic miracle go bad of late – an implosion largely brought about by administering to itself the austerian medicine it once prescribed to the Greeks.</p><p>His latest book, the 10th since 2010, departs from his usual sober fare. This time, he offers a collective portrait of five unyielding women in his life who, in their different ways, thumbed their noses at patriarchy and autocracy. Written after thugs beat him up in 2023 in what he <a href="https://www.politico.eu/article/greece-former-finance-minister-yanis-varoufakis-attack-athens-diem25/">described</a> as a “brazen fascist attack”, this is a therapeutic enterprise that doubles as a counter-history of postwar Greece.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/oct/10/raise-your-soul-by-yanis-varoufakis-review-an-intimate-history-of-greece">Continue reading...</a>
Read original The Guardian