Sociopolitical Genealogy of Populist Conspiracy Theories in the Context of Hyperpolitics

被引:0
|
作者
Esposito, Alessio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Roma Tor Vergata, Dept Hist Humanities & Soc, I-00133 Rome, Italy
关键词
conspiracism; populism; hyperpolitics; democracy; inequality; social capital; trust; power;
D O I
10.3390/genealogy8020066
中图分类号
C95 [民族学、文化人类学];
学科分类号
0304 ; 030401 ;
摘要
The wide circulation of conspiracy narratives and their frequent intertwining with populist rhetoric is both an element of concern and a topic of intense scientific and philosophical debate. The depth of the link between conspiracy theories and populism represents a crucial issue whose comprehension can facilitate understanding their specific nature and the factors behind their diffusion in public communication. To this end, it is necessary to cultivate an interdisciplinary approach and great critical attention, eschewing monocausal explanations. This paper addresses the question of the essentially political nature of conspiracism, confronting the recent epistemological debate that, by putting the positivist paradigm aside, has sought to explore and understand the socio-cultural roots of conspiracy rhetoric, with its sceptical, antagonistic and hermetic traits. By integrating the reflections of epistemologists such as Cassam or Harris with the considerations of political scientists such as Taggart and with Schmitt's radical reflections on politics, it is perhaps possible to reintegrate the different approaches to populist conspiracism into an overall social genealogical perspective, thanks also to recent demographic elaborations. Thus, we could ascribe the spread of conspiracism to the prevalence in societies of a hyperpolitical discursive regime, i.e., founded on the principle of opposition, without the possibility of compromise, between different groups and interests. At the basis of such Manichaeism, it is plausible to place in the first place the growing inequalities and related social disintegration, which hinder the circulation of trust and recognition between individuals and groups, thus ending up undermining democracy at its roots, as a political system that legitimises and thus peacefully regulates conflict.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] On Political Conspiracy Theories
    Raikka, Juha
    JOURNAL OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY, 2009, 17 (02) : 185 - 201
  • [32] Conspiracy Theories: A Primer
    Schroeder, Sarah Bartlett
    LIBRARY JOURNAL, 2022, 147 (06) : 54 - 54
  • [33] INTRODUCTION: CONSPIRACY THEORIES
    Coady, David
    EPISTEME-A JOURNAL OF INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIAL EPISTEMOLOGY, 2007, 4 (02): : 131 - 134
  • [34] CONSPIRACY THEORIES OF REPRESENTATION
    CARROLL, N
    PHILOSOPHY OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES, 1987, 17 (03) : 395 - 412
  • [35] Conspiracy Theories of Consciousness
    Greg Jarrett
    Philosophical Studies, 1999, 96 : 45 - 58
  • [36] American Conspiracy Theories
    Fenster, Mark
    PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS, 2017, 15 (01) : 257 - 258
  • [37] The Philosophy of Conspiracy Theories
    Butterfield, Paul
    DIALECTICA, 2016, 70 (04) : 627 - 632
  • [38] The Fifth Cleavage Genealogy of the Populist Ideology and Parties
    Millefiorini, Andrea
    PARTECIPAZIONE E CONFLITTO, 2022, 15 (02) : 500 - 504
  • [39] Understanding Conspiracy Theories
    Douglas, Karen M.
    Uscinski, Joseph E.
    Sutton, Robbie M.
    Cichocka, Aleksandra
    Nefes, Turkay
    Ang, Chee Siang
    Deravi, Farzin
    POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 40 : 3 - 35
  • [40] CONSPIRACY THEORIES AND DELUSIONS
    Bortolotti, Lisa
    Ichino, Anna
    Mameli, Matteo
    RETI SAPERI LINGUAGGI-ITALIAN JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2021, 8 (02): : 183 - 199