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ویرایش: 1
نویسندگان: Amit Ron (editor). Majia Nadesan (editor)
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 0367271443, 9780367271442
ناشر: Routledge
سال نشر: 2020
تعداد صفحات: 283
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 11 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Mapping Populism: Approaches and Methods به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب نگاشت پوپولیسم: رویکردها و روش ها نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
این مجموعه که میتواند مقدمهای برای حوزه پوپولیسم باشد، مجموعهای از رویکردهای بینرشتهای را برای بسیج، نظریهها، معانی و اثرات پوپولیستی ارائه میکند. با انجام این کار، ایده های اساسی در مورد اینکه پوپولیسم چه چیزی هست یا نیست را رد می کند. در عوض، شرایط سیاسی، اجتماعی و اقتصادی مساعد برای ظهور جنبشهایی با برچسب پوپولیستی، عقلانیت و جریان عاطفی آن جنبشها، مسائل سیاسی مربوط به رابطه پوپولیستها و نخبگان، و رابطه بین گروههای پوپولیستی را بررسی میکند. و پلورالیسم سیاسی این کتاب که با توافق و اختلاف در مفروضات و روششناسی دست و پنجه نرم میکند، برای محققان جامعهشناسی، علوم سیاسی، ارتباطات و مطالعات فرهنگی علاقهمند به پوپولیسم، جنبشهای اجتماعی، شهروندی و دموکراسی جذاب خواهد بود.
This collection, which can serve as an introduction to the field of populism, provides an array of interdisciplinary approaches to populist mobilizations, theories, meanings, and effects. In so doing, it rejects essentialized ideas regarding what populism is or is not. Rather, it explores the political, social, and economic conditions that are conducive for the emergence of movements labelled populist, the rationalities and affective tenor of those movements, the political issues pertaining to the relationship between populists and elites, and the relationship between populist groups and political pluralism. Grappling with accord and discord in assumptions and methodologies, the book will appeal to scholars of sociology, political science, communication and cultural studies interested in populism, social movements, citizenship, and democracy.
Cover Half Title Title Page Copyright Page Table of Contents List of figures List of tables Note on contributors Acknowledgments Introduction to collection: problematizing populism Studying and understanding populism Populism and “the people” What are the conditions of possibility for populism? Is populism irrational? Who is pulling the strings? Is populism an elite-driven phenomenon? Is populism necessarily anti-pluralist? Practical problems in studying populism References PART I: Explaining populism 1. Explaining populism introduction References 2. Populism and citizenship: toward a “thickening” of American populism What is populism? Conclusions References 3. From personal opinion to social fact: interactional dynamics and the corroboration of populist support The case Conclusion References 4. The people and the public: cyber-demagoguery and populism as war Battleground people 1: early twentieth-century public as media subjects for war Battleground people 2: late twentieth-century and early twenty-first-century panics over populism and conspiracy theories Conclusion Note References PART II: Populism and pluralism 5. Populism and pluralism introduction References 6. Democratic populism as constructive nonviolence Populisms A people’s Green New Deal References 7. Lessons for left populism: organizing revolt in Babylon The original rainbow coalition as an example of populism The rainbow coalition’s Babylonian revolt Survival programs and the limits of populist aesthetics in people-building Conclusion Notes References 8. Popularism, pluralism, and the ordinary Anxieties of the ordinary The prospects for inclusion Notes References PART III: Populism: conditions of possibility 9. Populism: conditions of possibility introduction References 10. Does globalization produce populist parties? a cross-national analysis Development and populist blowback Research strategy: design, data, and analysis Results Discussion and conclusion References 11. Populism, monopoly, and the urban liberal–rural populist coalition Populism Anti-monopolism and New Deal liberalism Conclusion References 12. Farming failure: the origins of rural Trumpism, 1950–2016 References 13. Austerity and ethno-nationalism: the politics of scarcity in right-wing populism Fiscal austerity and nationalism The politics of scarcity: right-wing populism’s demand side and supply side Conclusion Notes References 14. Populism and war-making: constructing the people and the enemy during the early Lebanese Civil War era Populism and the Lebanese Civil War Forging a populist alliance: the Lebanese left and the Palestinian fedayeen Producing the enemy: populist dehumanization in the sources Conclusion References PART IV: Between “the people” and elites 15. Between “the people” and elites introduction References 16. The social psychology of populism Social identity theory and political mobilization Social psychological processes in populist mobilization Conclusion: social psychological advantages of populist entrepreneurship References 17. Populist corruption talk Redemption versus pragmatism Populism, ideology, and political style Populist corruption talk Consequences of populist corruption talk Responding to populist corruption talk References 18. Populism, democracy, and the Ukrainian uprisings of the Orange Revolution and Euromaidan Populism and democracy The Orange Revolution: democracy and populism The Euromaidan: democracy and populism Conclusion References 19. Twenty-first century American populist movements: the challenges of organization and institutionalization American institutions and resistance to change Organizational dilemmas Left and right populism, organization, and government for the people References 20. Crisis government: the populist as plebeian dictator A materialist history of populism A republican interpretation of populism From dictatorship to crisis government The populist as plebeian dictator Notes References PART V: Issues and methodologies 21. Issues and methodologies introduction What How Why References 22. Political theory and its problem with populism Political theorists and populism Alternatives: a minimal definition Therapy for populism: a dialectical approach Why are new directions in the study of populism needed? Conclusion References 23. New directions in quantitative measures of populism: a survey Underlying conceptualizations and main operationalizations What we have learnt: a critical assessment Notes References 24. Populism from the bottom up: ethnography from Trump’s U.S. and Kirchner’s Argentina Toward a populist ethnography Kirchner and Trump from below Stereotypes and populist identity Reconstructing the nation Conclusion References Conclusion: emerging issues and future directions Index