|
Cover |
1 |
|
|
Note on the Editors |
3 |
|
|
Titel |
4 |
|
|
Imprint |
5 |
|
|
Table of Contents |
6 |
|
|
Heike Paul: Introduction |
8 |
|
|
Hans Vorländer: Populism and Modern Democracy – An Outline |
20 |
|
|
Frank Decker: Populism in Germany and Abroad |
36 |
|
|
Jürgen Gebhardt: “We the People”: Popular Sovereignty, National Identity, and the Democratic Principle |
52 |
|
|
Michael Hochgeschwender: US-Populism in the Late Nineteenth Century |
62 |
|
|
Jack Zhou, D. Sunshine Hillygus, John Aldrich: Understanding the Trump Win: Populism, Partisanship, and Polarization in the 2016 Election |
72 |
|
|
Laura Vorberg: #BasketofDeplorables: Digital Imagined Communities, „Twitter“-Populism, and the Cross-Media Effects of Popular Political Social Media Communication in the 2016 US Presidential Election |
96 |
|
|
Michael Oswald: Jobs, Free Trade, and a Conspiracy: Trump’s Use of Producerism |
116 |
|
|
Heike Paul: Authoritarian Populism, White Supremacy, and „Volkskörper“-Sentimentalism |
134 |
|
|
Simon Strick: Right-Wing World-Building: Affect and Sexuality in the ‘Alternative Right’ |
164 |
|
|
Akwugo Emejulu: Feminism for the 99%: Towards a Populist Feminism? |
190 |
|
|
Nicole Anna Schneider: Redefining “We, the People”: Black Lives Matter and the Democratization of Political Culture |
196 |
|
|
Sascha Pöhlmann: Missing the People: Populist Aesthetics and Unpopular Resistance |
222 |
|
|
Donatella Izzo: Pop(e)ulism: Populist Miracles and Neoliberal Theologies |
242 |
|
|
Carlos de la Torre: What Can We Learn from Latin America to Understand Trump’s Populism? |
260 |
|
|
Ursula Prutsch: Populism in Brazil: Getúlio Vargas and Jair Bolsonaro |
282 |
|
|
Notes on Contributors |
300 |
|
|
Backcover |
304 |
|