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Publikační činnost
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Record type:
kapitola v odborné knize (C)
Home Department:
Katedra filozofie (25100)
Title:
Historiographic Populist Emotivism
Citace
Tucker, A. M. Historiographic Populist Emotivism.
In:
B. Bevernage, E. Mestdagh, W. Ramalho, M.-G. Verbergt.
Claiming the People's Past: Populist Politics of History in the Twenty-First Century.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. s. 248-266. Metamorphoses of the political: multidisciplinary approaches. ISBN 9781009453615.
Subtitle
Publication year:
2024
Obor:
Form of publication:
Elektronická verze
ISBN code:
9781009453615
Book title in original language:
Claiming the People's Past: Populist Politics of History in the Twenty-First Century
Title of the edition and volume number:
Metamorphoses of the political: multidisciplinary approaches
Place of publishing:
Cambridge
Publisher name:
Cambridge University Press
Issue reference (issue number):
:
Published:
v zahraničí
Author of the source document:
B. Bevernage, E. Mestdagh, W. Ramalho, M.-G. Verbergt
Number of pages:
19
Book page count:
343
Page from:
248
Page to:
266
Book print run:
EID:
Key words in English:
populism; philosophy; historography; emotivism
Annotation in original language:
It would be a stretch to claim to write about populist philosophies or theories of history because populism does not possess the kind of reflective systematic coherence that distinguishes philosophical theories. Still, it is possible to identify, I argue, a distinct populist attitude to historiography that can be derived from a political theory of populism. This attitude to historiography is expressed by the rhetoric, speeches, and speech acts such as tweets of populists from different parts of the world and different ends of the political spectrum.*There is a great, indeed ever-increasing, variety of theories of populism. Even within the confines of this volume, no single theory or meaning of populism is accepted by all. I have advocated a theory of populism as the politics of the passions (Tucker 2020). Accordingly, I argue that populism approaches historiography as a narrative expression of the passions projected on the past. This passionate-emotive attitude to historiography generates corresponding values that judge competing historiographies according to their passionate intensity that expresses ‘authenticity’. Finally, I consider the more recent populist use of perspectivism, constructivism, and dialectics to confuse and silence its potential critics.
Annotation in english language:
It would be a stretch to claim to write about populist philosophies or theories of history because populism does not possess the kind of reflective systematic coherence that distinguishes philosophical theories. Still, it is possible to identify, I argue, a distinct populist attitude to historiography that can be derived from a political theory of populism. This attitude to historiography is expressed by the rhetoric, speeches, and speech acts such as tweets of populists from different parts of the world and different ends of the political spectrum.*There is a great, indeed ever-increasing, variety of theories of populism. Even within the confines of this volume, no single theory or meaning of populism is accepted by all. I have advocated a theory of populism as the politics of the passions (Tucker 2020). Accordingly, I argue that populism approaches historiography as a narrative expression of the passions projected on the past. This passionate-emotive attitude to historiography generates corresponding values that judge competing historiographies according to their passionate intensity that expresses ‘authenticity’. Finally, I consider the more recent populist use of perspectivism, constructivism, and dialectics to confuse and silence its potential critics.
References
Reference
R01:
RIV/61988987:17250/24:A250382F
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