This book examines the origins of populism in Canada and the United States and its development into a powerful and at times disturbing political force. Focus is on five historical periods: The Populist Party of the United States in the 1890s, Prairie Populism in Canada during the early and mid-20th century, the Reform Party of Canada in the 1980s and 90s, the âleftâ and ârightâ populism of Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump in the early 21st century, and the phenomenon of Ford Nation in modern day Ontario, Canada. The author extends Ernesto Laclauâs analysis of populism as a âlogicâ in On Populist Reason (2005) to explore how a âpeopleâ come into being in their conflict or clash with an âelite,â defined by Chartists in the 19th century as âidlers,â providing a contrast between âproducersâ and ânon-producers.â The author examines the linguistic media (speeches, books, radio, twitter, Facebook) used in populist discourse to convey a political message and to articulate the needs, wishes and will of a newly born âpeopleâ in their numerous guises and expressions, from âthe plain people,â to âthe little guy,â or to âbrothers and sisters.â This volume will be of interest to researchers in an interdisciplinary range of fields, including discourse analysis, corpus linguistics, pragmatics, rhetoric and stylistics, political communication, social movements theory, media studies, and Canadian and American history.
Price history
Jan 6, 2023
€133.78