Right-wing populism’s (ab)use of the past in Italy and the Netherlands

Historical analysis is increasingly used as a tool in the study of present-day populism in Europe. The past is often explored as a source of analogies through which to examine today’s populism, and at other times in search of causal mechanisms to explain the current populist wave. In this paper we focus on a third kind of link between populism and the past, namely the ways populist movements and leaders use and abuse history and historical memory in their quest for mass support. This angle on the populism/history nexus can yield deep insight into the ideological make-up of these movements and... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Couperus, Stefan
Tortola, Pier Domenico
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Reihe/Periodikum: Couperus , S & Tortola , P D 2019 , ' Right-wing populism’s (ab)use of the past in Italy and the Netherlands ' , Debats. Journal on culture, power and society , vol. 4 , no. special issue 2 , pp. 105-118 . https://doi.org/10.28939/iam.debats-en.2019-9
Schlagwörter: FASCISM
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26824474
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/0d48d7de-eb16-4854-93fc-fe9c1d4cfb95

Historical analysis is increasingly used as a tool in the study of present-day populism in Europe. The past is often explored as a source of analogies through which to examine today’s populism, and at other times in search of causal mechanisms to explain the current populist wave. In this paper we focus on a third kind of link between populism and the past, namely the ways populist movements and leaders use and abuse history and historical memory in their quest for mass support. This angle on the populism/history nexus can yield deep insight into the ideological make-up of these movements and their voters, and populism’s discursive dynamics and strategies.Focusing on contemporary right-wing populism and its approach to the dark past of European countries, the paper conducts an exploratory analysis that posits three ways in which the past is (ab)used by populists: (a) the positive reassessment of dark history; (b) the recourse to fake history; (c) the evocation and subsequent denial of links with the dark past. In examining each, we use examples taken from the cases of Italy and The Netherlands to check the plausibility of our categories across different national cases.