“…9 Furthermore, appraisals of the Great Plains ''calamity howlers,'' treatments of fiery populist oratory in Gilded Age San Francisco, defenses of populist activism against claims of demagoguery, examinations of the ''new populism'' of the mid-1980s, and insights into the essentials of the Kansas People's Party discourse all identify important features of particular populist rhetorics; however, these studies' concentration on specific instances of populism occludes recognition of populism as a recurring vocabulary. 10 One alternative to these overly specified conceptions of populism is for critics and historians to resist the urge to classify all discourses that champion the cause of ordinary people as populist. In one of the few treatments of the broader language of populism, Michael Kazin laments the ''glib habit'' of branding ''everything from Bruce Springsteen to Rush Limbaugh'' as populist discourse.…”