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[ecrea] Event: We, the people: political, media and popular discourses of 'us' and 'them'
Fri Oct 05 15:19:24 GMT 2018
WE, THE PEOPLE: POLITICAL, MEDIA AND POPULAR DISCOURSES OF 'US' AND 'THEM'
WHEN: Friday 26 and Saturday 27 October 2018
WHERE: Department of Media and Communications,
Tower Three, 7th Floor, Silverstone Room, London School of Economics
DESCRIPTION
Populism is on the rise across the world. The elections of /Fidesz/
government in Hungary in 2010 and the /Law and Justice/ party in Poland
in 2015, the shocks of Brexit and Trump in 2016 as well as the recent
elections in major European states, including Austria, Italy, France,
Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden, have brought right-wing populist
parties closer to power and presented them with an opportunity to shape
policy. While there has been much discussion on different political
aspects of populism, its persistent attacks on legal institutions of
liberal democracy, its likely causes and consequences, our two-day
symposium explores the communicative strategies and populist discourses
of the ‘people.’ We will explore identity politics as well as the
political, media and popular narratives of ‘us’ and ‘them’ in Europe and
beyond.
TO REGISTER:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/we-the-people-political-media-and-popular-discourses-of-us-and-them-tickets-50904726407
PROGRAMME:
Friday 26 October
11:30-12:00 Coffee & Registration
12.00-13:30 /Populists, Citizens and the Media: the complex relationship/
Kira Gartzou-Katsouyanni, LSE, /Greco-German media depictions of the
Self and Other during the Eurozone Crisis: Mutual Recognition Lost?/
Katharine Sarikakis, University of Vienna, LSE Visiting Fellow, /Media
and citizens in Greece and beyond: Resistance and Domination through
Euro-crisis/
Marzia Maccaferri, Goldsmiths, University of London, /Five Star Movement
‘Online’ Populism in Historical Perspective/
Franco Zappettini, Liverpool University, /The Tabloidization of the
Brexit Campaign: Power to the (British) People?/
Chair: Charlie Beckett, LSE
13:30-14:30 Lunch
14:30-15:30 Key Note: Michał Krzyżanowski, Örebro University &
University of Liverpool
/Discursive Shifts and the Normalisation of Exclusion: On Politicisation
and Mediatisation of the ‘Refugee Crisis’ in Europe/
Chair: Lily Chouliaraki, LSE
15:30-17:00 /Discourses, Narratives and Ideologies of Populism/
//
Jonathan Hopkin, LSE, /Post-truth, bullshit and bad ideas: deficit
fetishism in contemporary politics /
Aurelien Mondon, University of Bath (with Aaron Winter, UEL),
/Whiteness, Populism and the Racialisation of the Working-class in the
UK and the US/
Benjamin de Cleen, Vrije Universiteit Brussels (with Péter Csigó, Jason
Glynos, Aurelien Mondon), /Discourses about Populism and Their Effects:
Mimesis, Ideology, Bubble and Hype/
17:00-17:30 Coffee break
17:30-18:30 Key Note: Yannis Stavrakakis, Aristotle University of
Thessaloniki
/Challenges in Contemporary Populism Research/
Saturday 27 October
10:00-11:15 /Politics of exclusion: media and political representations
of ‘Other’/
Myria Georgiou, LSE and Rafal Zaborowski, King’s College London, /Heroes
and strangers: media representations of Europe’s “refugee crisis”/
Marek Troszynski, Collegium Civita, /Poland’s liberal and illiberal
encounters with refugees /
Gholam Khiabany, Goldsmiths, University of London, /Refugee crisis,
imperialism and pitiless//wars on the poor /
11:15-12:15 Key note: Michael Cox, LSE Ideas
//
/The Rise of Populism and the Crisis of Globalisation: Brexit, Trump and
Beyond/
Chair: Robin Mansell, LSE
12:15-12:45 Lunch
12:45-14:00 /The New Right in the New Europe: political and popular
narratives of change/
József Böröcz, Rutgers University, /The Unbearable Whiteness of the
Polish Plumber and the Hungarian Peacock Dance around ‘Race’/
Stanislaw Mocek, Collegium Civitas, Eva Polonska, LSE, /Poles Apart:
political and popular discourses of nation, democracy and Europe/
Seán Hanley, UCL, /Understanding the illiberal turn: democratic
backsliding in the Czech Republic/
14:00-14:30 Coffee break
14:30-15:30 Key note: Francisco Panizza, Government Department, LSE
/Populism and Identification/
Chair: Robin Mansell, LSE
15:30-17:00 /Discourses of democratic values and ‘Europe’/
Gilles Ivaldi, University of Nice, France, /Radical right and
EU-pessimism in France/
/Roch Dunin-Wasowicz, UCL, Generation Brexit: what do young people in
Britain say about Europe? /
Stijn van Kessel, Queen Mary University, London/, The populist politics
of Euroscepticism in times of crisis: comparative conclusions/
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