Critical Theory and Authoritarian Populism 2018
DOI: 10.16997/book30.h
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Public Sphere and World-System: Theorizing Populism at the Margins

Abstract: Books and journals, open access & print www.uwestminsterpress.co.uk Welcome to the latest catalogue of the University of Westminster Press, an academic open access publisher since 2015. Our logo, an open laptop and an open book forming a W, was intended as a succinct comment and a visual representation of our mission. For UWP the most signficant development in the last year has been the addition of three new journal titles: the first, Anthropocenes -Human, Inhuman, Posthuman (p.34) an interdisciplinary title o… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
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“…Such a process, we posit, fleshes out what Morelock and Narita (2018) mention as the structural problem of politically representing the "people," as the "people" are inherently divided in their sets of interests. Rather than addressing this structural problem, the alliance between political campaigners and the elite take advantage of it.…”
Section: Elite Alliances and The Political Campaign Industrymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Such a process, we posit, fleshes out what Morelock and Narita (2018) mention as the structural problem of politically representing the "people," as the "people" are inherently divided in their sets of interests. Rather than addressing this structural problem, the alliance between political campaigners and the elite take advantage of it.…”
Section: Elite Alliances and The Political Campaign Industrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The "ummah" too, is pitted against supporters of a "new elite," receiving the support of big political parties. Morelock and Narita (2018) discussed that in the attempt for proper theorising of populism, we must take into account its manifestations in countries other than the West, where the "people" are narratively constructed against the narratively constructed "elite." In the case of Indonesia's elections, we can see how racialised and pious people (the "indigenous ummah" and the "pluralist") are narratively constructed to align with differently racialised and pious sections of the elite.…”
Section: Concluding Remarks: Authoritarian Populism In Indonesia's Democracymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the massification of radio in the region occurred only in the 1930s under the aegis of its political uses, for example, with Getúlio Vargas in Brazil and the populist regime of Lazaro Cardenas in Mexico (Haussen 2001). With mass communication technologies, capitalist modernizing moves rearranged the public sphere and empowered the masses with a politicized culture and promises of a new protagonism (Morelock and Narita 2018b). At the same time, these technologies and their effects constituted and facilitated new forms of domination and a structural transformation of politics and culture in the twentieth century (Pavlik 1996;Hyden et al 2002;Oswald 2009).…”
Section: The Spectacle Of Mechanical Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The threat to democratic procedures, the rise of ultra-nationalist mass mobilizations and the polarization of social space into reified moral narratives (anti-establishment rhetoric, we/they, "the people", etc.) (Morelock and Narita 2018) illustrate a new moment of right-wing populism and its authoritarian drifts. The general discourse of crisis, like the sword of Damocles, hangs over our heads.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%