EBOOK

Populocracy
The Tyranny of Authenticity and the Rise of Populism
Catherine FieschiSeries: Comparative Political Economy(0)
About
Populism has become a significant feature of mature democracies in the twenty-first century and the rise of populist parties is proving a powerful and disruptive force. Catherine Fieschi offers a comparative analysis of the rise of populist parties in France, Italy, the Netherlands and the UK in the context of major digital and political transformations. Populism is effective, Fieschi shows, because it originates from within the democratic tradition and has been able to turn some of democracy’s key strengths against it – what she calls Jiu-jitsu politics. Populism needs to be understood not simply as a response to globalization by the “disillusioned” or “left behind”, but as a consequence of the digital revolution on our political and democratic expectations. She demonstrates how new dynamics unleashed by social media – the fantasy of radical transparency, the demand for immediacy and the rejection of expert truth and facts – have been harnessed by populism, enabling it to make unprecedented inroads into our political landscapes.
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Reviews
"A succinct, comprehensively researched and intelligible account of the definitional contours, history, multiple origins, and multifaceted nature of 'populism'. Fieschi disentangles populism from fascism and the 'extreme right' and identifies the core memes of 'populocratic' sentiment and ressentiment. In doing so she highlights the seductiveness of its myth of 'the people', and the growing danger
Roger Griffin, Oxford Brookes University
"Catherine Fieschi does what many claim to do but few achieve: write an original book on populism. Far-reaching and thought-provoking, Populocracy is a must read for practitioners and scholars alike."
Cas Mudde, Stanley Wade Shelton UGAF Professor of International Affairs, University of Geo
"Catherine Fieschi's brilliant analysis of populism draws on her decades of deep research to bring the colour, the people, the real-life experiences that explain the 'jiu-jitsu' politics beyond the survey data and theoretical models. This book gives the vital missing links between the history of populism and its contemporary forms, puncturing the simplistic explanations with analytical rigour and
Heather Grabbe, Director, Open Society European Institute, Brussels