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Empire's Legacy: Roots of a Far-Right Affinity in Contemporary France: Oxford Studies in Culture and Politics

Autor John W.P. Veugelers
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 dec 2019
Many argue that globalization and its discontents explain the strength of populism and nativism in contemporary Europe, Latin America, and the United States. In France, though, an older potential born of imperialism has propelled the far right of Jean-Marie and Marine Le Pen. To explain how the National Front gained a foothold in France, Empire's Legacy connects local politics with historical developments that span nearly two centuries. Its analysis hinges on the idea of political potential: the possibility that a social group will support a movement, pressure group, political party, or other organized option. Starting from the French conquest of Algeria, John W.P Veugelers follows the career of a potential, showing how it erupted into support for the National Front in Toulon, the largest city under the far right of any postwar European democracy.Relying on archival research, electoral surveys, and personal interviews, Veugelers shows that voluntary associations, interest-group politics, and patron-client relations knit together a far-right affinity bequeathed by French imperialism. Veugelers examines the possibilities and limits of far-right power at the local level, moreover, and the barriers that effective, scandal-free government pose to extremist success.Exploring new terrain in the study of contemporary politics, Empire's Legacy makes the case for a subcultural approach that connects social networks to symbolic codes.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190875664
ISBN-10: 0190875666
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 3 black and white line drawings
Dimensiuni: 236 x 163 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Studies in Culture and Politics

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Empires legacy takes a fresh look at contemporary right-wing populism. Brushing aside economic explanations, it puts forward an important and neglected factor, the affinity with the far right that developed among settlers in Algeria...The central assumption of the book is that this state of mind stayed alive within the many voluntary associations the repatriates set up to defend their claims. Not only did these networks allow for a successful lobbying at the local level, they also had a deep socializing impact on the individuals, insulating their members from the rest of the population and saving intact their memories of the past and their resentment. The closer their ties with these associations, the more receptive they would be to the nativist and anti-immigrant platform of a party like the Front national (FN) after its electoral take off in the 1980s, when their political demand met the adequate political supply.
Veugelers brilliantly traces the 'career of a potential'—a disposition formed in specific circumstances, incubating over time, and emerging contingently. His work suggests that it's not enough for political sociologists to focus only on what becomes manifest as political events. We need to also consider what exists in potentia. We need to be on the lookout for 'subterranean currents, countervailing forces, and lost causes.' Otherwise we cultivate blind spots. This is a sociology of possibility but not of the kind sociologists have traditionally looked out for–utopias and the like—but, rather, the negative of this: dark, authoritarian undercurrents. The committee felt that Empire's Legacy pushed the boundary of our subdiscipline forward and expanded the field of political inquiry in ways that felt imperative for our times.

Notă biografică

John W.P. Veugelers is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. He has written widely on the far right, immigration politics, social movements, and voluntary associations in Canada, France, and Italy. The recipient of awards for outstanding teaching at the University of Toronto, Veugelers has been a visiting professor at universities in Africa, Asia, and Europe, and a visiting fellow at the Camargo Foundation in France.