This article examines the campaign of the Brexit Party via the conceptual frameworks of cultural performance and the politics of victimhood. The Brexit Party depicts the post-industrial working class communities as forgotten and betrayed and attacks the Labour Party for its stance on Brexit. While current research on national populism focuses on demographic and cultural changes and highlights a prevailing distrust of the political establishment there is little as to how victimhood is performed by the agents of national populism. By deploying Jeffrey Alexander’s conceptualisation of cultural performance, the article identifies the current status of victimhood and its political communication in the Brexit debate. As a result, the post-industr...
This article analyses the Brexit debate within the UK. It examines the historical roots of the debat...
This article investigates the idea of ‘the social’ in Europe after the UK's EU Referendum vote, with...
In this article we approach Brexit via the conceptual framing of sovereignty in the political commun...
The article gives an overview of the key cultural and structural factors behind nationalist populis...
This paper outlines an ongoing qualitative study in social psychology, with a pilot study completed ...
In this article, we seek to provide a social quality–led analysis of some of the conditions that led...
This article was supported by the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.The...
This article examines the 2016 Referendum on the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union a...
The article analyses the progress of the Brexit debate in the UK from the time that David Cameron an...
In this article, we seek to provide a social quality–led analysis of some of the conditions that led...
Too often members of the working class who voted to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum ...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...
This ‘Speaking Out’ essay contributes to debates over Brexit and populism by suggesting how we, as m...
Too often members of the working class who voted to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum ...
This article offers a conjunctural analysis of the financial and political crisis within which Brexi...
This article analyses the Brexit debate within the UK. It examines the historical roots of the debat...
This article investigates the idea of ‘the social’ in Europe after the UK's EU Referendum vote, with...
In this article we approach Brexit via the conceptual framing of sovereignty in the political commun...
The article gives an overview of the key cultural and structural factors behind nationalist populis...
This paper outlines an ongoing qualitative study in social psychology, with a pilot study completed ...
In this article, we seek to provide a social quality–led analysis of some of the conditions that led...
This article was supported by the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.The...
This article examines the 2016 Referendum on the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union a...
The article analyses the progress of the Brexit debate in the UK from the time that David Cameron an...
In this article, we seek to provide a social quality–led analysis of some of the conditions that led...
Too often members of the working class who voted to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum ...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...
This ‘Speaking Out’ essay contributes to debates over Brexit and populism by suggesting how we, as m...
Too often members of the working class who voted to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum ...
This article offers a conjunctural analysis of the financial and political crisis within which Brexi...
This article analyses the Brexit debate within the UK. It examines the historical roots of the debat...
This article investigates the idea of ‘the social’ in Europe after the UK's EU Referendum vote, with...
In this article we approach Brexit via the conceptual framing of sovereignty in the political commun...