This edited collection draws on case studies from around the world to shed light on the sometimes contentious topic of populism. Examining diverse contexts including North America, Latin America, Europe, New Zealand, and Russia, the authors employ different approaches to populist discourse to analyse key notions in populism such as the people and the heartland as well as the exploitation of medium and narrative. Each of the chapters in this book explores an aspect of the way in which populism constructs a political reality, with reference to such high-profile examples as Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders, the Scottish National Party, Hugo Ch?vez, Vladimir Putin, Barack Obama, and Winston Peters. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of both discourse analysis and political science.
Chapter 1: A Short Introduction to Populism; Marcia Macaulay.- Chapter 2: Representing the people: claiming the heartland in Scottish election manifestos; Ruth Breeze.- Chapter 3: Hugo Ch?vezs Contemporary Latin American Populist Discourse; Ricardo Gualda.- Chapter 4: Self and Other Metaphors as facilitating features of populist style in diplomatic discourse: A case study of Obama and Putins speeches; Liudmila Arcimavi1ien.- Chapter 5: An untrustworthy entertainer: Populist identities in the voices of New Zealand Voters; Jay Woodhams.- Chapter 6: Bernie and The Donald: A Comparison of Left- and Right-Wing Populist Discourse; Marcia Macaulay.
Marcia Macaulay is Associate Professor of English and Linguistics at York University, Canada. She is the author of Processing Varieties in English: An Examination of Oral and Written Speech Across Genres (1990), as well as articles on speech act theory, stylistics, and political discourse. She was also co-editor of Pragmatics anl(