Part I.Populist Communicative Process in Comparative Perspective
Chapter 1.Introduction
Chapter 2.Disrupting Transitional and Established Democracy: The Stories and Contexts of UKIP and the Economic Freedom Fighters
Chapter 3.A Communication Approach to Political Populism: Ideology, Performance and Representation
Part II.Populism as Ideology: Populism on Ideology
Chapter 4.Populist Ideology and Communicative Process
Chapter 5.UKIP’s and the EFF’s Populist Ideology
Chapter 6.The Ideological Process of Populism
Part III.Populism as Performance: Populism on Performance
Chapter 7.Political Performance and Populist Representation
Chapter 8.UKIP’s and the EFF’s Disruptive Performances
Chapter 9.Populist Disruptive Performance: The Forms and Functions of Populist Representation
Part IV.Populism as Mediation: Populism on Mediation
Chapter 10.The Hybrid Mediation of Populism
Chapter 11.Hybrid Mediation: UKIP’s and the EFF’s Performative Assemblages
Chapter 12.Mediated Populism as Process
Chapter 13.Conclusion
Lone Sorensenis Lecturer in Media and Communication in the School of Media and Communication at the University of Leeds, UK.
How can we make sense of the current age of global political disruption when populism leaves norms overturned and the future form of democracy unpredictable?
Political representatives are no longer elected for their experience and expertise but out of a desire for an ephemeral sense of authenticity, a direct connection to citizens, and the certainty of the truths they tell. But when populists project these ideas and claim to represent the citizenry, what is reality and what is strategic performance for the media presence and an invented ‘people’? This conceptually rich book explores the performative strategies of the populist politicians who disrupt the normative order with acts of ‘truth-telling’. It disentangles their complex use of media—from their appeal to news values through spectacular disruptions to sophisticated social media commentary—in repertoires of mediated performances. Based on vigorous empirical research in both established and transitional democracies, it develops a theoretical framework of populist communication in the new media environment.