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Open Speakers Series Lecture "Three Remarks on Populism: Sovereignty, Class, Figure" to be given by Professor Mahmut Mutman

Tampereen yliopisto
PaikkakuntaKanslerinrinne 1, 1st fl., 33100 Tampere
Tampere University, NB! Pinni B, lecture hall B1100, Kanslerinrinne 1, 1st fl.
29.10.2019 14.15–15.45
PääsymaksuMaksuton tapahtuma
The Speakers Series is a series of Studia Generalia Lectures in the Study of Society organized bimonthly by Tampere University Institute for Advanced Social Research (IASR) in cooperation with the New Social Research Programme (NSR).

Tampere University
Institute for Advanced Social Research (IASR) in cooperation with
New Social Research Programme (NSR)  

Speakers Series 2019-2020, Autumn Programme  


OPEN LECTURE


Three Remarks on Populism: Sovereignty, Class, Figure
Professor Mahmut Mutman, IASR

Time: Tuesday, 29 October 2019, at 16:15-17:45
Place: Tampere University, NB! Pinni B, lecture hall B1100, Kanslerinrinne 1, 1st fl. 

 “Change the object itself” said Roland Barthes once. These three remarks are meant to change the object called “populism” by looking at other things: sovereignty, class, figure. First, I will discuss the concepts of sovereignty and political theology. Unfolding Foucault’s observation that “we have not cut off the king’s head in political theory yet”, I will underline the discontinuities and continuities between royal (or divine) and democratic (or national) sovereignty. I will draw on both Foucault’s concept of biopolitics and Derrida’s deconstruction of sovereignty. This discussion will bring me to the question “who are the people?”, and to the second remark on class. I will argue that “populism” has to do with class as a dynamic group formation in modern capitalist society. More specifically, it is an effect of the opening up or narrowing down of the paths of upward/downward mobility due to deregulation, unemployment, financialisation, and mobility of capital. The class dynamic operates in different ways in central and peripheral formations, leading to different political articulations around ethnicity, race and religion. Third remark is about the difficult concept of “figure,” which operates on linguistic as well as visual and visceral registers. This has to do with the figure of the other, the immigrant, the criminal or the terrorist as well as the figure of the leader. In conclusion, I will suggest that, rather than hastily synthesizing these uneven dimensions, we work along multiple lines of inquiry. 

 

Welcome!

 

Järjestäjä

Tampere University Institute for Advanced Social Research (IASR) in cooperation with New Social Research Programme (NSR)

Lisätietoja

Marjukka Virkajärvi, marjukka.virkajarvi@tuni.fi, +358 50 318 6697