Free Shipping on Orders of $50 or more.

Critical Theory and Demagogic Populism - Paperback

Critical Theory and Demagogic Populism - Paperback

Regular price $78.57
Sale price $78.57 Regular price
Sale Sold out
Unit price
/per 
This is a pre order item. We will ship it when it comes in stock.
Lock Secure Transaction

by Paul K. Jones (Author)

This is the first study to make a detail case for the Frankfurt School's relevance to understanding contemporary populism. It reconstructs their analysis of 'modern demagogy' and demonstrates its advantages over orthodox 'populism studies' and the work of Laclau. The book also extends the Institute's analysis to assess 'counter-demagogic' forces.

Back Jacket

Populism is one of the most significant phenomena in twenty-first-century politics, but what it is and how it functions remains a source of dispute. Side-stepping the usual debates over definition, Critical theory and demagogic populism makes a unique contribution by revisiting the Frankfurt School's ground-breaking work on demagogy.

The book reconstructs the Institute for Social Research's 'Studies in Prejudice' project of the 1940s, providing an analysis of demagogy in the United States that engages with Weber's work on charismatic leadership, the US liberal critique of demagogy and the theories of Freud, notably his group psychology. The result is what Adorno calls 'a kind of psychotechnics', where the rally acts as a site of performative cultural production of demagogic speech. Extending this analysis into the present, the book identifies modern demagogy as a key feature of contemporary populism. Populist movements, whether 'left' or 'right', are susceptible to 'demagogic capture', and the likelihood of capture has only increased with the rise of the culture industry, since demagogues, from Father Coughlin in the 1920s to Trump today, have always been 'early adopters'.

Providing a critique of orthodox populism studies and its critics, notably Laclau, Critical theory and demagogic populism brings the wider Gramscian tradition into productive dialogue with the work of the Institute for Social Research. It concludes by extending the Institute's analysis to assess 'counter-demagogic' forces.

Author Biography

Paul K. Jones is Reader in Sociology in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University

Number of Pages: 296
Dimensions: 0.62 x 9.21 x 6.14 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: April 12, 2022