Descripción del proyecto
Un análisis ascendente del populismo
Europa Central y Oriental han sido testigos de un auge sin precedentes del populismo, el nacionalismo antiliberal y la aparición de formas de gobierno cada vez más autoritarias. Sin embargo, es importante reconocer que los denominados «regímenes populistas» de estas regiones y los tipos específicos de populismo mnemónico que emplean presentan variaciones significativas. El equipo del proyecto MEMPOP, financiado por el Consejo Europeo de Investigación, pretende cuestionar los análisis predominantes en los estudios sobre populismo, que suelen caracterizar el populismo de Europa Central y Oriental como una consecuencia del postsocialismo. En cambio, el equipo del proyecto propone un método ascendente que se centra en investigar las prácticas mnemónicas cotidianas y los sentimientos populistas de los individuos corrientes que residen en la periferia fronteriza transnacional. Asimismo, en MEMPOP se pretende ofrecer una comprensión global de las manifestaciones del populismo en la región.
Objetivo
Political polarisation with rising support for populist movements is one of the most pressing global issues that we are facing worldwide. Yet, it is usually Central and Eastern Europe that are singled out for examples of unprecedented resurgences of populism, illiberal nationalism, and increasingly authoritarian forms of government. However, considering how divergent the so-called populist regimes of Central and Eastern Europe are, as well as the types of mnemonic populism they employ, ‘populism’ has become a label that is as empty as it is fashionable. To scrutinise the notion of Central and Eastern European populism and provide a novel perspective on this phenomenon, the project proposes a radical shift from the two units of analysis that are taken for granted in populism studies: the temporal unit that presumes Central and Eastern European populism is a post-socialist consequence; and the geographical unit that essentialises contemporary nation-states of Central and Eastern Europe. By adopting a bottom-up approach and investigating the everyday mnemonic practices and populist sentiments of ordinary people living in the transnational borderland periphery, namely, Burgenland, Galicia, Istria, and Silesia, this pioneering study moves away from the elite, top-down investigation of populism as well as the tendency to treat the state as the primary unit of analysis. Instead, it shifts the centre of focus to the post-imperial transnational borderlands where, in fact, both antagonistic memories and support for populist movements are arguably the strongest.
Ámbito científico
Palabras clave
Programa(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Régimen de financiación
HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC GrantsInstitución de acogida
11000 Praha 1
Chequia