Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The transgressive aesthetics of populism

View through CrossRef
This article consolidates the emerging discursive-performative paradigm in populist studies by presenting the idea of populism as an aesthetic transgression, bridging the gap between discursive and sociocultural-performative strands. The article is broadly inspired by Jacques Rancière’s notion of aesthetics as the ‘partage du sensible’ and critically employs it to understand how populism transgresses the rules establishing what can appear in politics. The article claims that populism is aesthetically transgressive in two ways: (1) by making visible subalternised subjects through the discursive articulation of the ‘people’ and (2) by naming the ‘elite’ in a way that makes visible underlying modes of domination. The article argues that this framework allows for a more fruitful understanding of the relationship between populism and topics such as crisis and institutionalism. Moreover, the article employs this framework to differentiate between emancipatory and reactionary forms of populism, connecting emancipatory populism to queer aesthetic practices and explaining how it reinvigorates liberal democracy. Conversely, reactionary populism mobilises what Hannah Arendt called the ‘mob’ and ends up reinforcing modes of domination.
Title: The transgressive aesthetics of populism
Description:
This article consolidates the emerging discursive-performative paradigm in populist studies by presenting the idea of populism as an aesthetic transgression, bridging the gap between discursive and sociocultural-performative strands.
The article is broadly inspired by Jacques Rancière’s notion of aesthetics as the ‘partage du sensible’ and critically employs it to understand how populism transgresses the rules establishing what can appear in politics.
The article claims that populism is aesthetically transgressive in two ways: (1) by making visible subalternised subjects through the discursive articulation of the ‘people’ and (2) by naming the ‘elite’ in a way that makes visible underlying modes of domination.
The article argues that this framework allows for a more fruitful understanding of the relationship between populism and topics such as crisis and institutionalism.
Moreover, the article employs this framework to differentiate between emancipatory and reactionary forms of populism, connecting emancipatory populism to queer aesthetic practices and explaining how it reinvigorates liberal democracy.
Conversely, reactionary populism mobilises what Hannah Arendt called the ‘mob’ and ends up reinforcing modes of domination.

Related Results

Populism and Global Politics
Populism and Global Politics
The rise of populist movements and parties the world over in recent years has spurred much academic interest in the subject. Waves of rising insurgent parties and movements across ...
The Oxford Handbook of Populism
The Oxford Handbook of Populism
Abstract Populist forces are increasingly relevant, and studies on populism have entered the mainstream of the political science discipline. However, no book has syn...
Fatalism, Authoritarianism and Clumsy Solutions: A Cultural Theory of Populism
Fatalism, Authoritarianism and Clumsy Solutions: A Cultural Theory of Populism
The return of (authoritarian) populism has undermined democratic governance around the world. Yet the study of populism appears to have reached an impasse. It has been argued that ...
Chinese Environmental Aesthetics
Chinese Environmental Aesthetics
As an independent modern humanities discipline, aesthetics is an essential part of philosophy. Environmental aesthetics is the application of aesthetic theory in the field of envir...
"Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan": Democratic Theory, Populism, and Philip Roth's "American Trilogy"
"Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan": Democratic Theory, Populism, and Philip Roth's "American Trilogy"
Populism, as both ideology and social movement, is nearly a universal, albeit sporadic, feature of all modern democratic political systems. Populism is also arguably the only examp...
“Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan”: Democratic Theory, Populism, and Philip Roth's “American Trilogy”
“Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan”: Democratic Theory, Populism, and Philip Roth's “American Trilogy”
Abstract: Populism, as both ideology and social movement, is nearly a universal, albeit sporadic, feature of all modern democratic political systems. Populism is also arguably the...
The Sedimentary Sequence and Palaeogeographic Changes of the South Yellow Sea Since the Olauvai Subchron1
The Sedimentary Sequence and Palaeogeographic Changes of the South Yellow Sea Since the Olauvai Subchron1
Abstract According to the alternation of terrestrial beds and transgressive beds, the sedimentary sequence of the South Yellow Sea since the Olduvai subchron can be divided into 15...
The Mahakam Delta, Indonesia: a Case Study for the Deposition and Preservation of Transgressive Deltaic Successions
The Mahakam Delta, Indonesia: a Case Study for the Deposition and Preservation of Transgressive Deltaic Successions
Introduction Traditional models characterize the modern Mahakam Delta as a mixed river-dominated and tide-dominated delta that is presently prograding (e.g Gallow...

Back to Top