Professor of Political Science, University of Valparaiso (Chile)
Duration of stay: 7 May to 2 July 2024
In cooperation with Prof. Dr. Johannes Völz
Pierre Ostiguy is a social scientist and social theorist, professor at the University of Valparaíso (Chile), and a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley. He is co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Populism (2017, reedited 2019); main editor of Populism in Global Perspective: A Performative and Discursive Approach (Routledge 2020); and author of numerous articles and book chapters on populism, both phenomenologically and theoretically. Globally, he is best known for his sociocultural approach to populism (as “the flaunting of ‘the low’”) and in the Americas for his earlier work on Peronism (and anti-Peronism) in Argentina. His social theoretical work has engaged that of Ernesto Laclau and built upon the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu and Norbert Elias. His interests have ranged from mainstream political science (party systems, political spaces, political behavior), through political sociology and social theory, to cultural studies. He has taught as a regular faculty member in Canada, the United States, Argentina, and Chile and published in Spanish, English, and French. He has also been a visiting Fellow at the Scuola Normale Superiore (Florence), the Kellogg Institute, and now the FKH.
Research project: Towards a Social Theory of Populism (Left and Right)
The study of populism in universities of the global North has been dominated by political scientists trained in comparative politics. At the same time, the efforts by the most illustrious of them to define populism as a set of ideas (akin to an ideology) seem to have failed by standards of political philosophers and theorists (Freeden 2017). More puzzling, the phenomenon we call populism seems to appear both on the left (particularly in Latin America and in early American history) and on the right (particularly in Europe and in the US in recent decades), calling into question the unity of the phenomenon. While now a global phenomenon, its epicenters still appear to remain in Latin America, the US, and more recently Europe i.e., the “global West”. Margaret Canovan has even called populism “the shadow of democracy” (1999:3). While the electoral sociology of populism has been thoroughly studied, we still remain speculatively in the dark as to both the causal mechanisms of the successful workings of populist appeals and, more interestingly, the inner sociopsychological mechanisms (including of course emotions) at play amongst its core supporters. For this purpose, our research is inspired by the work of German sociologist Norbert Elias (particularly “A Theoretical Essay on Established and Outsiders Relations” and “Civilisation and informalisation: changes in European standards of behaviour in the twentieth century” in Studies on the Germans) and to a lesser extent the work of Bourdieu on tastes and social hierarchies in Distinction. With modernity, social mobility –including of groups as a whole—has been a fact of social life. The loss of a privileged status position or, conversely, a subordinated one, is not without effects on the self. Informalization has affected perceived senses of equality, entitlement, and relative status –with behavioral entailments. While (especially for the right) populism may be a reaction to or (often on the left) a cause of changes in relations of power within a given society, phenomenologically it is best studied drawing on the kind of evidence commonly found in cultural studies.
Selected publications
„Die Stimme des Hugo Chavez: Eine rhetorische Analyse,“ in: WestEnd: Neue Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung (forthcoming 2024).
(ed. with Francisco Panizza and Ben Moffitt), Populism in Global Perspective: A Performative and Discursive Approach, Routledge 2020.
(ed. with Cristobal Rovira, Paul Taggart and Paulina Ochoa), The Oxford Handbook of Populism, Oxford University Press 2017. (Second edition, paperback, 2019).
“Populism: A Socio-Cultural Approach”, in: Rovira et al. (eds.): The Oxford Handbook of Populism, Oxford University Press 2017. (with Ken Roberts): “Putting Trump in Comparative Perspective: Populism and the Politicization of the Sociocultural Low”, in: TheBrown Journal of World Affairs 23: 1 (2016), p. 25-50.
Events
Thursday June 20, 2024, 11.00
Lecture: “Towards a Social Theory of Populism (Left and Right)”
Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften, Am Wingertsberg 4, 61348 Bad Homburg
For further information: Click here….