Summary
Contents
Subject index
Populism and globalization are shorthand for the temper of our times. Populism is usually cast as globalization’s nemesis, a backlash against worldwide connectivity, while globalization is often said to be in retreat or even demise. This book takes issue with both interpretations, claiming instead that while populism of all shades tends to be anti-globalist, the globalism it is pitted against has changed dramatically in recent years and is increasingly decentred, destabilized, contingent, multipolar, and multidirectional. Axford paints a picture of this new globalization and dissects the strains of postmodern populism that both contest it and are its expression. Attention to the current surge of populism also affords purchase on an axial feature of our turbulent and globalized world–the imbrication or antithesis of local and global, of difference and sameness. This is an interdisciplinary examination of populism as a factor in global change, drawing on international politics, sociology, and global studies.
Postmodern Populism, Globalization and the Crisis of Modernity
Postmodern Populism, Globalization and the Crisis of Modernity
Introduction
The ‘Great Unsettling’, or rupture, spoken of by a growing number of commentators threatens the assumed developmental logic of national and societal integration – of classic modernization – and usurps the imagined endgame of secular globalization, of a singular late modernity or a smooth networked world. Populism is a local phenomenon, though its appearance as a global force with which to be reckoned reflects widespread anxieties and uncertainties about the global-modern condition as this visits localities and individuals. But for all its apparent reversion to Latour’s ‘land of Old’, to the imagined virtues of a pre-modern way of life, populism is also a postmodern phenomenon in ways I shall ...
- Loading...