Description du projet
Une analyse ascendante du populisme
L’Europe centrale et orientale a connu une montée sans précédent du populisme, du nationalisme illibéral et voit l’émergence de formes de gouvernance de plus en plus autoritaires. Toutefois, il est important de reconnaître que les régimes dits populistes dans ces régions, et les types spécifiques de populisme mnémonique sur lesquels ils s’appuient, présentent des variations significatives. Le projet MEMPOP, financé par le CER, vise à remettre en question les analyses dominantes dans les études sur le populisme, qui caractérisent souvent le populisme d’Europe centrale et orientale comme une conséquence du post-socialisme. Le projet propose plutôt une approche ascendante qui se concentre sur l’étude des pratiques mnémoniques quotidiennes et des sentiments populistes des individus ordinaires résidant dans la périphérie frontalière transnationale. MEMPOP cherche à apporter une compréhension globale des manifestations du populisme dans la région.
Objectif
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.
Champ scientifique
Mots‑clés
Programme(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Thème(s)
Régime de financement
HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC GrantsInstitution d’accueil
11000 Praha 1
Tchéquie