Who Thinks, Feels. The Relationship Between Emotions, Politics and Populism
<span class="abs_content">There is a tendency both in academia and in popular understandings to posit emotions against rationality and to judge them as an expression of intellectual inferiority. This could not be more evident than in current accounts of populism, which often describe...
Saved in:
Main Author: | Donatella Bonansinga |
---|---|
Format: | article |
Language: | EN |
Published: |
Coordinamento SIBA
2020
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doaj.org/article/80d9fb57d5d84f37a3bbe52ef6524479 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Excluding Emotions: The Performative Function of Populism
by: Emmy Eklundh
Published: (2020) -
Democratic Deliberation, Social Movements and the Quest for Democratic Politics
by: Donatella della Porta, et al.
Published: (2018) -
Power and Authority in Social Movements: A Political Philosophy of Prefigurative Politics (Power and Authority in Social Movements: A Political Philosophy of Prefigurative Politics)
by: Luois Edgar Esparza
Published: (2013) -
Political Sociology as a Connective Social Science: Between Old Topics and New Directions
by: Fabio de Nardis
Published: (2014) -
Who Belongs to Europe? Notes on the (Lack of) Inclusiveness of Research on Social Transnationalism
by: Christine Barwick
Published: (2020)