ABSTRACT

This book examines the highly ambivalent implications and effects of anti-elitism. It draws on this theme as a cross-cutting entry point to provide transdisciplinary analysis of current conjunctures and their contradictions, drawing on examples from popular culture and media, politics, fashion, labour and spatial arrangements.

Using the toolboxes of media and discourse analysis, hegemony theory, ethnography, critical social psychology and cultural studies more broadly, the book surveys and theorizes the forms, the implications and the ambiguities and limits of anti-elitist formations in different parts of the world. Anti-elitist sentiments colour the contemporary political conjuncture as much as they shape pop cultural and media trends. Populists, right-wing authoritarian ones and others, direct their anger at cultural, political and, sometimes, economic elites while supporting other elites and creating new ones. At the same time, "elitist" knowledge and expertise, decision-making power and taste regimes are being questioned in societal transformations that are discussed much more positively under headlines such as participation or democratization.

The book brings together a group of international, interdisciplinary case studies in order to better understand the ways in which the battle cry "against the elites" shapes current conjunctures and possible future politics, focusing on themes such as nationalist political discourse in India, Austria, the UK and Hungary, labour struggles and anti-oligarchy rhetoric in Russia, tax-avoiding elites and fiscal imaginaries, working-class agency, Melania Trump as a celebrity narrative in Slovenia, aesthetic codes of the Alt-Right, football hooliganism in Germany, "hipster hate" in German political discourse or the politics of expertise and anti-elite iconography in high fashion internationally. The book is intended for undergraduates, postgraduates and postdoctoral researchers.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license

part |45 pages

Introduction

part 47I|49 pages

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chapter 3|14 pages

The betrayal of the elites

Populism and anti-elitism
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chapter 4|18 pages

The transclasse and the common people

Autosociobiographies and the anti-elitist imaginary
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part 97II|58 pages

chapter 5|21 pages

What are we going to do about the rich?

Anti-elitism, neo-liberal common sense and the politics of taxation
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chapter 6|15 pages

Criticism of elites and subjective social agency

A look at the workers
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chapter 7|20 pages

“Social rage” against the oligarchs

Justice, Jews and dreams of unity in current Russia
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part 155III|51 pages

chapter 8|15 pages

Countryside versus city?

Anti-urban populism, Heimat discourse and rurban assemblages in Austria
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chapter 9|19 pages

Invoking urgency

Emotional politics and two kinds of anti-elitism
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chapter 10|15 pages

The elite as the political adversary

Neo-liberalism and the cultural politics of Hindutva
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part 207IV|54 pages

chapter 11|14 pages

The heroic deed, the wrong word and the utopia of clarity

The discourse of Germany's New Right on elites and its links to popular culture
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chapter 12|20 pages

“Unpolitical in this time/truly one can no longer be so”

The raw anti-elitism of hooligans in Germany
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chapter 13|18 pages

Nazi-Barbies*

Performing ultra-femininity against the “Feminist Elite” in the Alt-Right movement
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part 261V|73 pages

chapter 14|20 pages

Celebrity and the displacement of class

The folkloristic ordinariness of Melania Trump
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chapter 15|11 pages

Who says who's cool, and how much is it worth?

The convergence of elite luxury fashion with streetwear styles
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chapter 16|23 pages

Against hipsters, left and right

A figure of cultural elitism and social anxiety
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chapter 17|17 pages

The ghost of Europe is shifting shape

How the film Folkbildningsterror intervenes in left debates around class vs. identity politics
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