评估欧洲边缘的民粹主义:普遍、表现、持续

IF 0.3 Q4 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Populism Pub Date : 2020-11-11 DOI:10.1163/25888072-02021044
A. Makarychev, Lane Crothers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期特刊收录了一些文章,这些文章的作者探讨了西方核心以外国家的不同形式的民粹主义,因此该领域的专家对这些国家的民粹主义知之甚少。为本问题选择的以国家为基础的案例研究反映了欧洲非中心政治中民粹主义力量的多样性。他们每个国家都与欧洲主要大国有着丰富的冲突和争议,这是当代民粹主义话语的强大来源之一,推动他们中的许多人走向民族重申和对欧盟的怀疑。本期收录的文章涵盖了民粹主义政治的各个方面。Olga Lavrinenko在匈牙利和捷克共和国谈到了“技术官僚民粹主义”,Alexandra Yatsyk在波兰谈到了“生物政治民粹主义”,Ionut Chiruta在罗马尼亚探讨了基于记忆的民粹主义,Michael Cole和Silas Marker在格鲁吉亚和丹麦(相应的)研究了意识形态上明确的民粹主义形式,具有强烈的民族主义和民族宗教内涵,Aliaksei Kazharski与Andrey Makarychev分析了斯洛伐克和爱沙尼亚的表演民粹主义。拉夫里年科关于技术官僚民粹主义的文章对民粹主义叙事的习惯性分类提出了特别严峻的挑战,这种分类是对后政治/行政/管理政策制定的表达性和情感上的反对。在她的研究中,她认为民粹主义已经殖民了整个政治光谱,不尊重传统的左右或自由保守的分歧。Kazharski和Makarychev也认同这一假设,他们的结论是,在爱沙尼亚和斯洛伐克,在媒体上获得公众知名度的民粹主义方法,以及对“人民”的表现,在整个政治领域都得到了传播。将民粹主义方法和叙事纳入行政和管理逻辑,模糊了民粹主义和技术官僚之间的界限。同样,将民粹主义概念化为一种建立在某种专业知识和知识基础上的“经济项目”,开辟了从福柯启发的治理视角审视民粹主义的新途径,这或许是自相矛盾的。民粹主义作为一种话语在各种社会、文化和政治领域中暴露自己
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing Populism at Europe’s Margins: Pervasive, Performative, Persistent
This special issue is a collection of articles whose authors explore different forms of populism in countries located beyond the Western core and therefore much less known to specialists in the field. The country-based case studies selected for this issue reflect diversity of populist forces in non-central polities in Europe. Each of them has a rich legacy of conflicts and controversies with major European powers, which serves as one of powerful sources of contemporary populist discourses, pushing many of them towards national reassertion and EU-skepticism. The articles collected in this issue cover a variety of aspects of populist politics. Olga Lavrinenko speaks about ‘technocratic populism’ in Hungary and Czech Republic, Alexandra Yatsyk addresses ‘biopolitical populism’ in Poland, Ionut Chiruta explores memory-based populism in Romania, Michael Cole and Silas Marker engage ideologically explicit forms of populism, with strong nationalist and ethno-religious connotations, in (correspondingly) Georgia and Denmark, and Aliaksei Kazharski with Andrey Makarychev analyze performative populism in Slovakia and Estonia. Lavrinenko’s article on technocratic populism represents a particularly tough challenge to the habitual categorizations of populist narratives as an expressive and emotive opposition to post-political / administrative / managerial policy making. In her study she argues that populism has colonized the whole political spectrum and does not respect the traditional left-right or liberal conservative divides. This assumption is also shared by Kazharski and Makarychev who conclude that in Estonia and Slovakia populist methods of gaining public visibility in the media and performatively addressing ‘the people’ are spread all across the entire political spectrum. The inscription of populist approaches and narratives into administrative and managerial logics blurs the line between populism and technocracy. By the same token, a conceptualization of populism as an “economic project” grounded in a certain type of expertise and knowledge opens new avenues for—perhaps paradoxically—examining populism from a Foucault-inspired governmentality perspective. The variety of social, cultural and political spheres where populism exposes itself as a discourse
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