[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] conference: Political Discourse - Multidisciplinary Approaches #2: New discourses of populism and nationalism
Mon Dec 04 21:18:52 GMT 2017
status: CfP Call for papers
conference
Political Discourse - Multidisciplinary Approaches #2: New discourses of
populism and nationalism
21.06.2018-22.06.2018
Edinburgh Napier University
Since the Brexit vote in the United Kingdom and the rise of Trump, Orbán
and Le Pen, to name but a few, ‘populism’ has re-emerged as a common
keyword in international news coverage. This term has become highly
contested, often used to stigmatise political opponents. The current
conflation of new right-wing politics with ‘populism’ backgrounds
leftist mass movements such as Syriza in Greece and Podemos in Spain,
despite a rich history of left wing populism. Others have argued that
recent populisms transcend ideological orientations of left and right
and open up a new political divide: ‘Farewell, left versus right. The
contest that matters now is open against closed’. (The Economist on 30
June 2016).
The central common denominator of these diverse movements is an appeal
to ‘the people’, often defined in ethno-national terms, which is
contrasted with a corrupt, privileged and out-of-touch elite. Yet
differences persist in how we understand populism, both in populist
political approaches and in epistemological terms. What do politicians
in different countries mean by ‘the nation’ and ‘the people’ and how are
these signifiers discursively or rhetorically constructed? Which social
and political conditions are conducive to the emergence of populist
movements? Which policies are suggested in the name of ‘the people’
today and which discursive or rhetorical strategies are now employed to
justify them? What exactly do we, as discourse and rhetoric researchers,
mean by ‘populism’ and how can we analyse it? Does populism refer to a
specific political/linguistic/rhetorical practice (style), ideology or
political logic (antagonisms)? What are the social, discursive and p
olitical conditions of the so-called politics of ‘post-truth’?
In collaboration with Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, Brussels Office, and
DiscourseNet, we are calling for contributions for a two-day conference
to explore these questions. In order to understand the mechanisms of
populist discourses, their rhetoric as well as their contextual
conditions, we invite contributions from all fields involved in the
study of discourse and rhetoric. This conference aims to generate a
conversation among the diverse approaches to studying political
discourse and rhetoric as well as to promote a comparative approach to
the study of populism and nationalism as a global phenomenon.
This conference seeks to build bridges between academia and the world of
political practice. In support of an open discourse between academics
and political activists the conference will feature a World Café (see
for example
http://www.theworldcafe.com/key-concepts-resources/world-cafe-method/)
in addition to regular conference panels. All participants will be
invited to produce a very short text (no more than 500 words) in ‘plain
English’ to communicate key concepts and issues of populist and
nationalist discourse/rhetoric from their research/work to a wider
audience. These serve as the basis for discussions in the World Café and
will later appear on the conference website alongside other items.
Deadline for submission of the 500 words for accepted participants is 29
May 2018.
Keynote speakers
Prof Michael Billig (Loughborough University) Prof Yannis Stavrakakis
(Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
Prof Felicitas Macgilchrist (Georg-Eckert-Institut, Braunschweig)
Contact person: Dr Michael Kranert
email: (m.kranert /at/ napier.ac.uk)
Address: The Business School
Edinburgh Napier University
Craiglockhart Campus, Room 4/03
219 Colinton Rd
Edinburgh EH14 1DJ
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please
use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]