The Rhetoric of Populism: How to Give Voice to the People?

Similar documents
Right- wing Populism on the rise: Progressive counter strategies for Europe 1 st conference

Marco Scalvini Book review: the European public sphere and the media: Europe in crisis

The Politics of Emotional Confrontation in New Democracies: The Impact of Economic

ELECTORAL SYSTEMS, TRUST IN PARLIAMENT, AND VULNERABILITY TO POPULISM. Casey Mazzarella

Marcia Macaulay Editor. Populist Discourse. International Perspectives

PROCEEDINGS - AAG MIDDLE STATES DIVISION - VOL. 21, 1988

Jessie Street: Context

Populism in Europe and the Americas: Actors, Causes and Reactions

Title of workshop The causes of populism: Cross-regional and cross-disciplinary approaches

Translating Agency Reform

Traibalism and Liberal Democracy in a Post-Truth Environment. ISEEES Talk. Sept

The Interrelatedness of Barack Obama s Political Thought, Theme and Plot in His Campaign Speeches for the U.S. President

What is left unsaid; implicatures in political discourse.

CoR Workshop 2: Concepts (12 th December 2017) University of Birmingham (local host: Dr Henriette van der Blom)

GUN CONTROL 1. Gun Control: Genre Analysis of a You Tube video and an online article. Angel Reyes. University of Texas at El Paso

Populism is a Form of Anti- Pluralism

Making. Speeches. Unit 3. Rhetoric: different views. Rhetorical skills. Rhetoric. Lingua Inglese II Political Science 20/12/2013

Complex Futures. Palonen, Mia Emilia Elisabeth

Populism: theoretical approaches, definitions. POL333 Populism and political parties

How will the EU presidency play out during Poland's autumn parliamentary election?

Matt Browne. Where now for the third way? Progressive Outlook Matt Browne

Preventing Violent Extremism A Strategy for Delivery

RUXANDRA PAUL APRIL 2018 GLOBAL SHIFTS COLLOQUIUM

Evidence-based policy? Really?

NETWORK WAR JOURNALISM: ANALYSIS OF MEDIA COVERAGE OF THE 2011 CRISIS IN SOMALIA

Call for Papers. Position, Salience and Issue Linkage: Party Strategies in Multinational Democracies

Key Principles of an Effective Message

DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY BEYOND THE NATION-STATE

CoR Workshop 4: Reason and Reasoning (2 July 2018) University of Birmingham

The paradox of Europanized politics in Italy

Matthijs Rooduijn 1, Wouter van der Brug 1, Sarah L. de Lange 1, * and Jante Parlevliet 2

The Age of Migration website Minorities in the Netherlands

PARLEMETER 2018: TAKING UP THE CHALLENGE PATTERNS OF AMBIGUITY, CRISIS NARRATIVES AND CHALLENGES AHEAD

Political Discourse Analysis Between Ambiguities and Clarity

ENTERTAINMENT AND POLITICS

Politicization of administrative elites in Western Europe: an introduction

This course will analyze contemporary migration at the urban, national and

Argument, Deliberation, Dialectic and the Nature of the Political: A CDA Perspective

City, University of London Institutional Repository

Morality Politics in Western Europe

In her respective works, Robert-Millers presents a fascinating and detailed insight into the workings of

A critical-cognitive analysis of Donald Trump s discourse across time: Trump as a businessman versus Trump as a president

CEASEVAL BLOGS: Far right meets concerned citizens : politicization of migration in Germany and the case of Chemnitz. by Birgit Glorius, TU Chemnitz

Connected Communities

Political Clientelism and the Quality of Public Policy

The crisis of democratic capitalism Martin Wolf, Chief Economics Commentator, Financial Times

Political Science 452

Populism: simple demagoguery or threat to democracy? Ilze Tralmaka

The Ideology of the Jakarta Post through Headlines and Editorials on Negara Islam Indonesia s Case

The Values of the European Union : Elements of a European Identity

Beneyto Transcript. SP: Sandra Porcar JB: Jose Mario Beneyto

Political Discourse of Jordan: A Critical Discourse Analysis

Chantal Mouffe On the Political

4 Activism and the Academy

Palgrave Studies in European Political Sociology

PS4610: European Political Systems University of Missouri-Columbia

A joined-up Union in counterterrorism and public diplomacy: Let s stay on the right track!

WHY NOT BASE FREE SPEECH ON AUTONOMY OR DEMOCRACY?

1. Students access, synthesize, and evaluate information to communicate and apply Social Studies knowledge to Time, Continuity, and Change

CURRENT CHALLENGES TO EU GOVERNANCE

ECONOMIC, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL IDENTITY IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS GOV1

DEGREES IN HIGHER EDUCATION M.A.,

Political Discourse Analysis between Ambiguities and Clarity

Summary. The Politics of Innovation in Public Transport Issues, Settings and Displacements

A populist Zeitgeist? The impact of populism on parties, media and the public in Western Europe Rooduijn, M.

The Rise of Populism:

Submission to the Tax Deductible Gift Recipient Reform Opportunities Discussion Paper

Level: Master s thesis Pronoun Usage in the State of the Union Address and Weekly Addresses by Donald Trump

ME 830 Seminar in Evangelization: Applied Rhetorical Theory

Migration, Diasporas and Citizenship

Debating privacy and ICT

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Department of Politics V COMPARATIVE POLITICS Spring Michael Laver. Tel:

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Department of Politics. V COMPARATIVE POLITICS Spring Michael Laver Tel:

Politics between Philosophy and Democracy

The Anthropology of Elites

Politicians and Rhetoric

Euroscepticism in Hungary

METHOD OF PRESENTATION

Faculty Research Grant Proposal Cover Sheet DUE: November 6, 2017

The Euro Crisis and European Identities: Political and Media Discourse in Germany, Ireland and Poland

The Notion of Progress in International Law Discourse

MARK MAJOR 324 Pond Lab, University Park, PA Phone: (216)

Terrorism Docudrama: Political Violence Cinema and Television in the Global Age

ADMINISTRATIVE COMMISSION FOR THE COORDINATION OF SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEMS. Main conclusions of the 347 th meeting of the Administrative Commission

Towards the next Dutch general election: the issue opportunity structure for parties

MYPLACE THEMATIC REPORT: CITIZENSHIP

CENTRE DELÀS REPORT35. Fear and securitization in the European Union EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Authors: Ainhoa Ruiz Benedicto Pere Brunet

New Media, Cultural Studies, and Critical Theory after Postmodernism

Jean Monnet Course - Sociology of Human Rights in Contemporary Europe

World Forum for Democracy Panel Discussion: What Responses to Anti-Migrant Populist Rhetoric and Action?

Liberal Democrats Consultation. Party Strategy and Priorities

Terrorism Docudrama: Political Violence Cinema and Television in the Global Age

The quest for legitimacy in world politics international organizations selflegitimations

Cover Page. The handle holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation.

9717/18 RS/dk 1 DGD 1

LM1 1 March 2018 Prof. M. Boyd

Conor Foley, The Thin Blue Line: How Humanitarianism Went to War (London: Verso, 2008). 266 pages. Hardback (ISBN-13: ),

Between Europeanization and populist calls for renationalisation Germany, the EU and the normality of crisis after the European elections

PISA, a mere metric of quality, or an instrument of transnational governance in education?

Transcription:

Call for papers The Rhetoric of Populism: How to Give Voice to the People? Editors Bart van Klink (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), Ingeborg van der Geest (Utrecht University) and Henrike Jansen (Leiden University). Possible contributors Researchers in the field of Linguistics, Literature Studies, Legal, Political and Social Theory. Publisher An international, renowned publishing house (for instance, Edward Elgar or Routledge). Procedure Firstly, the editors will make a selection of papers on the basis of the following criteria: (i) academic quality, (ii) suitability for the main theme and subthemes of the volume and (iii) originality both in content and approach. Secondly, a final book proposal including the papers selected will be sent to the publisher. Thirdly, the publisher will assess the book proposal. Finally, if the book proposal has been approved, the authors will be invited to write a paper. Each paper will be assessed by two peer reviewers (double-blind). The editors will decide, on the basis of the reviews, which papers will be included in the edited volume. A paper proposal (approx. 450 words) can be sent to the editors before the 1 st of September. Please send a proposal for the first part to Ingeborg van der Geest: i.m.vandergeest@uu.nl; for the second part to Bart van Klink: b.van.klink@vu.nl; and for the third part to Henrike Jansen: h.jansen@hum.leidenuniv.nl. Timetable 1 September 2017: Deadline paper proposals Autumn 2017: Selection of the paper proposals + final book proposal Spring 2018: 1 st workshop: discussion of paper proposals with authors Autumn 2018: 2 nd workshop: discussion of first drafts with authors Winter 2018: Double-blind reviews Spring 2018: Final concept-version papers Summer 2019: Publication and a conference for a general audience

I. How can populist discourse be characterized, both in terms of its content and its form? II. How can populist discourse be criticized from a normative (legal, political and/or social) perspective? III. Which counter-strategies can be employed against populist discourse, which persuasive counter-narratives can be construed? Approach The volume addresses the rhetoric of populism from a multidisciplinary perspective. In the first part, a characterization of populist discourse will be given by means of linguistics, argumentation theory and rhetoric. In the second part, populist discourse will be assessed from the viewpoint of legal, political and/or social theory. The third part will bring the various perspectives together: By which linguistic, argumentative and (other) rhetorical means could a successful counter-discourse be construed that persuasively contests the claims of populist discourse and presents an appealing alternative? Theme In the last decades, populist discourse has disseminated itself rapidly in the political sphere and in society at large. Populist discourse seems to pose a radical challenge to mainstream politics based on a notion of liberal democracy. However, populist discourse does not necessarily reject democracy or the Rule of Law out of hand; it endorses alternative conceptions thereof which diverge from mainstream liberal thought. Invoking the notion of popular sovereignty, it seeks to replace or supplement representative, parliamentary democracy by direct forms of democracy that present the will of the people in an undistorted and unmediated way. Typically, a charismatic leader acts and speaks on behalf of the people. Populist discourse posits and cultivates a distinction between the homogeneous and virtuous people on the one hand and elites and dangerous others (for instance, Muslims or immigrants) on the other hand, who are assumed to deprive the people of their rights, values, prosperity, identity, rights and voice (Albertazzi & McDonnell 2007: 3). Moreover, it has no patience for the complex bureaucratic operations of the modern state; it prefers instead straightforward and common sense solutions to society s complex problems (ibid.: 21). It is willing to suspend fundamental rights and to deny them to others, when the people s security, prosperity or identity is at stake. In contrast to the Establishment s politics of pragmatism, it offers a politics of redemption (ibid.: 2), which promises to regain after some sacrifices an imagined paradise lost when the people were one and living happily and peacefully together. This edited volume aims at understanding populist discourse as it manifests itself in various countries in Western Europe and the United States. What are its central claims and how are they presented, by means of which rhetorical means? How to account for its appeal? What are the normative concerns of those who oppose populist discourse? Why and in which respects

does it constitute a challenge to current notions of liberal democracy? And how can populist discourse be countered? What could be successful rhetorical counter-strategies? Content The volume consists of three parts which address the three main questions regarding (i) the content and form of populist discourse, (ii) the critique it engenders within legal, political and social theory, and (iii) the construction of a successful counter-discourse. There will be approx. 15 chapters in the volume part I: 7, part II: 4 and part III: 4 chapters. PART I: PART II: PART III: PART I: POPULIST DISCOURSE: CONTENT AND FORM CRITIQUES OF POPULIST DISCOURSE RHETORICAL COUNTER-STRATEGIES POPULIST DISCOURSE: CONTENT AND FORM In the first part, populist discourse will be characterized by looking both at its content that is, its central claims and the arguments given and its form that is, the way it presents and defends its central claims by using rhetorical devices such as ad populum and ad hominem arguments, metaphor, hyperbole, antithesis, framing, direct or vulgar language and other linguistic devices such as the strategic use of intensifiers, pronouns and syntactic positions. The volume aims to present a range of case studies from, for instance, Germany (Alternative für Deutschland), Denmark (Folkeparti), France (Front National), Hungary (Fidesz), The Netherlands (PVV), Poland (PiS), United Kingdom (UK Independence Party) and USA (Trump). Preferably, various cases will be compared in order to explore the similarities and differences between the various instances of populist discourse. What are the key themes and claims in populist discourse (logos)? How can its central ideology be characterized? What arguments are provided, or strategically chosen, to support its central claims? What are the main rhetorical (linguistic, paralinguistic, non-verbal) devices used in populist discourse in order to support its central claims? How is the relation between the party (or party leader) and the people construed in populist discourse? What view of democratic (re)presentation does it involve? How is the relation between the (nation) state and society construed? What does the identity politics offered in populist discourse consist of? How does populist discourse relate itself to the Rule of Law? How do populists balance their aim to persuade the public on the one hand and their aim to abide with the law on the other hand? How is political authority (ethos) construed in populist discourse? How does the political leader present him- or herself? What audiences do populists address? How do they adjust their contributions to the preferences of these audiences? To what kind of feelings do they appeal and how do they address these feelings (pathos)?

How to account for the popularity of populist discourse? What makes it, at least in some parts of society, a persuasive narrative? How does populist discourse contest established facts? How does it present and defend its own (alternative) facts? How does populist discourse make use of specific media (social media, television, meetings with voters) to convey its message? PART II: CRITIQUES OF POPULIST DISCOURSE In the second part, populist discourse is evaluated from a normative perspective drawn from legal, political and/or social theory. In particular, its underlying conceptions of democracy, Rule of Law and constitutionalism, will be assessed critically, including how it construes the relation between the party (or party leader) and the people and between the state and society. According to Müller (2016: 103), populism constitutes a real danger to democracy (not just to liberalism ). In his view, it is a degraded form of democracy that promises to make good on democracy s highest ideals (Müller 2016: 6). Democracy is based on the promise that the people can rule. In political reality, this promise can never be fulfilled. However, populist discourse thrives on the pretence that it can give back power to the people, that is the real people as opposed to foreign people or to the elite. The real people is, as Müller (ibid.: 27) puts it, an fictional entity outside existing democratic procedures, a homogeneous and morally unified body whose alleged will can be played off against actual election results in democracies. What exactly are dangers of invoking this kind of symbolic representation? In what respect and to what extent does populist discourse pose a radical challenge to current notions of democracy, the Rule of Law and constitutionalism? Why has the populist idea of direct (re)presentation of the people s will to be resisted? According to Müller (2016), populism is not necessarily opposed to the notion of a constitution, but it may construe a constitution of its own. How to evaluate a populist or partisan constitution from the viewpoint of constitutionalism? Is populist discourse a kind of totalitarianism as described and criticized by Lefort (1988)? Why has the place of power to remain empty, as Lefort claims? And can it remain empty? Why has the populist quest for homogeneity to be rejected and to what extent can liberal democracy give room to pluralism? To what extent is it useful to distinguish left wing from right wing populism? Should these types of populism be evaluated differently? Why is it important to hold on to established facts and to refute so-called alternative facts? How to address the populist claim that a critique of populist discourse is an ideological instrument to reinforce the power of the elite excluding the real people?

PART III: RHETORICAL COUNTER-STRATEGIES In the last part, building on the characterization and evaluation of populist discourse in part II and III, rhetorical strategies are presented that may counter the populist discourse. These strategies aim at presenting a different understanding of democracy, Rule of Law and constitutionalism, as well as the relation between the party (or party leader) and the people, and state and society. Müller claims that political actors have the obligation to engage with populists, as long as they abide with the law. However, as he adds: Talking to populists is not the same as talking like populists. One can take their political claims seriously without taking them at face value (Müller 2016: 83-84). According to him, it is possible to engage with populist on a symbolic level. However, how can one talk to people with very different world views and value orientations and who reject widely accepted facts and produce instead facts of their own? How could or should the claims of populist discourse be rejected or refuted? What would be the role of rhetoric in this critical exercise? How to present a persuasive counter-discourse building on alternative (liberal or other) notions of democracy, Rule of Law and constitutionalism? What kind of arguments (logos) can be used against populist argumentation? What kind of authority (ethos) should be set up against populist discourse and how? Which kind of emotions (pathos) should be mobilized against populist discourse and how? Which kind of linguistic devices would yield a strategic presentation of these means of persuasion? To what extent would it be justified to refute populist claims employing strategies that are also used in populist discourse? Would it make sense in this context to distinguish good populism from bad populism? To what extent can or should populist discourse be challenged before the court? Or should the debate take place outside the law, in the political sphere and in society at large? References Daniele Albertazzi & Duncan McDonnell (eds.), Twenty-First Century Populism: The Spectre of Western European Democracy, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2007. Claude Lefort, Democracy and Political Theory (translated by David Macey), Cambridge: Polity 1988. Jan-Werner Müller, What is Populism?, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 2016.