Populism is a somehow intractable notion, since its reference is much too wide, comprising phenomena that are indeed in conflict between them, and moreover blurred, by being often used in an instrumental, polemical way. Such intractability is then radicalized through the two alternative approaches to populism, one that is more or less neutral, rooting in the political science tradition, and a second one, fully normative, though fed by political realism, founding as it does on a specific political theory and project. In the article an alternative view is proposed, that of populism as the politics that is congruent with the increasing role played by ‘screens’, icons, and images in social relationships and indeed in political representation. In this way populism is approached as the specific way politics is done within the context of a digitalized société du spectacle. |
Search result: 3 articles
Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Populism, Liberal democracy, Political representation, Société du spectacle, Theatrocracy |
Authors | Massimo La Torre |
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Discussion |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2019 |
Keywords | migration, exile, citizenship, Europe, Spanish civil war |
Authors | Massimo La Torre |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Exile and migration are once more central issues in the contemporary European predicament. This short article intends to discuss these questions elaborating on the ideas of two Spanish authors, a novelist, Max Aub, and a philosopher, María Zambrano, both marked by the tragic events of civil war and forced expatriation. Exile and migration in their existential perspective are meant as a prologue to the vindication of citizenship. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2012 |
Keywords | Messina, earthquake, state of exception, rule of law, progress |
Authors | Massimo La Torre |
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Messina, a Sicilian town, was devasteted by an earthquake in1908. It was an hecatomb. Stricken through this unfathomable disgrace Messina’s institutions and civil society collapsed and a sort of wild natural state replaced the rule of law. In this situation there was a first intervention of the Russian Czarist navy who came to help but immediately enforced cruel emergency measures. The Italian army followed and there was a formal declaration of an ‘emergency situation.’ Around this event and the several exceptional measures taken by the government a debate took place about the legality of those exceptional measures. The article tries to reconstruct the historical context and the content of that debate and in a broader perspective thematizes how law (and morality) could be brought to meet the breaking of normality and ordinary life by an unexpected and catastrophic event. |