Chapter 2. Old and New Nationalisms in the Brexit Borderlands of Northern Ireland
Chapter 3. From Houses and Grandparents to Brexit: Connections Between Memory, Objects and Right-wing Populism
Chapter 4. "Dancing" With the New Right: Do New Partners Bring New Dangers to Germany?
Chapter 5. Disposession, Anger and the Making of a Neoliberal Legitimacy Crisis
Chapter 6. In the Camp of the Saints: Right-win Populism in Twenty-First Century France
Chapter 7. Independence Day: The Emotional Tenor of Populism in Poland
Chapter 8. Dance Populism: The Potato Principle and the New Hungarian Dance Craze
Chapter 9. Conclusion
Index
Katherine C. Donahue is Professor Emerita at Plymouth State University, USA. She has done fieldwork in France and the United States. She is the author of, among other books, Slave of Allah: Zacarias Moussaoui vs. The USA.
Patricia R. Heck is Professor of Anthropology Emerita at the University of the South in Sewanee, TN, USA. She has published articles on German reunification, local politics and identity in Greiz, on Bavarian local politics, and on US democracy.
This edited collection addresses a growing concern in Europe and the United States about the future of the European Union, democratic institutions, and democracy itself. The current success of right-wing parties—marked by the adoption of extremist nationalistic rhetoric aimed to incite fear of the “other” and the use of authoritarian policies when attaining the majority—is putting pressure on basic human rights and the rule of law. Eight sociocultural anthropologists, working in England, Northern Ireland, Italy, France, Poland, Germany, Hungary and the United States use varying methodological and theoretical approaches to inspect a number of such parties and their supporters, while assessing the underpinnings of current right-wing successes in what has heretofore been a recurring post-war cycle. The research collected in Cycles of Hatred and Rage supports the validity of the above concerns, and it ultimately suggests that in the current battle between democratic globalists and authoritarian nationalists, the outcome is far from clear.