Introduction David Payne, Alexander Stagnell, & Gustav StrandbergPart I: Political Reflections on the People
1. The People: Proper, Common, Improper. An Interview with Jacques Rancière Jacques Rancière, David Payne, Alexander Stagnell, & Gustav Strandberg
2. Demophobia in Politics: Remarks on Liberal Anti-Populism and the Possibility of a Radical Democratic Populism Oliver Marchart
3. Logics of Democracy in the Work of Ernesto Laclau and Jacques Rancière Mark Devenney & Clare Woodford
4.Disavowals of Populism: The Political Displacement of Homogeneity Karl EkemanPart II: Toward an Affectology of Populism
5. The Politics of Resentment and Its Pitfalls Samo Tomšic
6. “That’s Disgusting!”: The Shifting Politics of Affect in Right-Wing Populist Mobilization Maria Brock & Jenny Gunnarsson Payne
7. The People and the Image of the Leader: Reflections on Mass-Psychology Chiara BotticiPart III: The Aesthetics of the People
8.Picturing the People: The Dilemmas of Democratic Representation Paula Diehl
9. Aesthetic Forms of the Political: Populist Ornaments, Cultures of Rejection, Democratic Assemblies Stefan Jonsson
10. The Undivided People: On the Hypothesis of Radical Democracy in Peter Weiss’s “The Aesthetics of Resistance” Kim WestPart IV: The People beyond the Political
11. Fragmentation of the Idea of the People: The Afro-Brazilian Event Muniz Sodré
12.A Politics of the People and a Politics of the Popular: From the Russian Revolution to “Gramsci’s Ashes” Tora Lane
13. Facing People Ramona Rat
Epilogue
15. On ‘People’: Brief Theoretical Notes Michael Marder