John Wiley & Sons The Emotional Life of Populism Cover Throughout the world, democracy is under assault from various populist movements and ideologies. And.. Product #: 978-1-5095-5818-6 Regular price: $57.85 $57.85 Auf Lager

The Emotional Life of Populism

How Fear, Disgust, Resentment, and Love Undermine Democracy

Illouz, Eva / Sicron, Avital

Cover

1. Auflage Juni 2023
232 Seiten, Hardcover
Sachbuch

ISBN: 978-1-5095-5818-6
John Wiley & Sons

Kurzbeschreibung

Throughout the world, democracy is under assault from various populist movements and ideologies. And, throughout the world, the same enigma: why is it that political figures or governments, who have no qualms about aggravating social inequalities, enjoy the support of those whom their ideas and policies affect and hurt the most?

To make sense of this enigma, the sociologist Eva Illouz argues that we must understand the crucial role that emotions play in our political life. Taking the case of Israel as her prime example, she shows that populist politics rest on four key emotions: fear, disgust, resentment, and love for one's country. It is the combination of these four emotions and their relentless presence in the political arena that nourishes and underpins the rise and persistence of populism both in Israel and in many other countries around the world.

This highly original perspective on the rise of populism will be of interest to anyone who wishes to understand the key political developments of our time.

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Throughout the world, democracy is under assault from various populist movements and ideologies. And, throughout the world, the same enigma: why is it that political figures or governments, who have no qualms about aggravating social inequalities, enjoy the support of those whom their ideas and policies affect and hurt the most?

To make sense of this enigma, the sociologist Eva Illouz argues that we must understand the crucial role that emotions play in our political life. Taking the case of Israel as her prime example, she shows that populist politics rest on four key emotions: fear, disgust, resentment, and love for one's country. It is the combination of these four emotions and their relentless presence in the political arena that nourishes and underpins the rise and persistence of populism both in Israel and in many other countries around the world.

This highly original perspective on the rise of populism will be of interest to anyone who wishes to understand the key political developments of our time.

Introduction: The Worm Inside the Apple

Chapter 1: Securitist Democracy and Fear

Chapter 2: Disgust Entrepreneurs

Chapter 3: Resentment or the Hidden Eros of Nationalist Populism

Chapter 4: National Pride and the New Politics of Class

Conclusion: The Emotions of the Decent Society
"A great theorist of the emotional life of capitalism, Eva Illouz develops here one of the most original and succinct accounts of far-right populism as a politics of feeling. Her brilliant analysis of its core emotions, fear, disgust, resentment and love, revitalizes scholarship on the political sociology of authoritarianism, while also offering a robust critique of Israel's lethal politics and a new, much-needed vision of democratic emotionality. A must-read!"
Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics

"Combining penetrating social-scientific analysis with revealing interviews, Illouz offers original insights into Israel's longstanding and intensifying embrace of populism. Pithy, smart, and timely, this book should be read by anyone interested in contemporary Israeli politics and society."
Derek Penslar, author of Zionism: An Emotional State

"[A] sobering account ... suggests that hope, in principle, can strengthen the bonds of fraternity not just among the nation's own members but with other countries as well, opening the way to dialogue, tolerance, and justice."
Robert Zaretsky, The Atlantic

"an engaging analysis"
Emotions & Society
Eva Illouz is Directrice d'Etudes at the EHESS in Paris and Rose Isaac Chair of Sociology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

E. Illouz, The Hebrew University of Jersalem