We ignore moods in politics at our peril

November 2024 Forums General discussion We ignore moods in politics at our peril

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  • #231667
    Lew
    Participant

    Reading this certainly put me in a bad mood.

    Lew

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/jul/25/we-ignore-moods-in-politics-at-our-peril

    Jonathan Freedland offers the astute insight that Brexit is more a felt vibe than a literal definition (Brexit is a mood, not a policy – and Liz Truss captures it in all its delusion, 22 July).

    If so, how should democracies argue about and represent moods? What is the mood-world equivalent of a political manifesto? Should we expect democratic citizens to vote in moods or for moods? Must mood politics always be the province of demagogues and manipulators?

    The political language of rational-choice politics has little to say about mood, often dismissing it as frothy emotional distraction from interest-based preferences. Consequently, we are often dismayed by the shock waves of populism.

    Some of us within the academy have been paying attention in recent years to the ways in which mood inflects democratic politics. I wonder how often this term will be used in the Guardian and other media outlets between now and the next general election? I wonder if we can learn to take it more seriously?
    Stephen Coleman
    Professor of political communication, University of Leeds

    #231697
    ALB
    Keymaster

    The original of the abstract of his research will put you in an even worse mood when you consider how clearly he wrote when he used to write for the Socialist Standard.

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/360398935_Feeling_ItNot_Feeling_It_Mood_Stories_as_Accounts_of_Political_Intuition

    How far did you get before you gave up, realising that “those within the academy” speak a different language, unintelligible to the rest of us !

    #231705
    Lizzie45
    Blocked

    A very close friend of mine, who also used to be a member of the SPGB, never had any illusions about Coleman, particularly after he left to pursue his career in academia.

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