Changing spaces of political encounter and the rise of anti-politics: evidence from Mass Observation's General Election diaries
Changing spaces of political encounter and the rise of anti-politics: evidence from Mass Observation's General Election diaries
Negativity towards the institutions of formal politics is currently a concern across much of the democratic world. It is generally agreed that such negativity increased among British citizens during the second half of the twentieth century. In this paper, we analyse a novel dataset not previously used to study this topic: Mass Observation’s General Election diaries. Since diarists wrote mostly about politicians, political campaigns, and associated media coverage, we ask specifically what the diaries can tell us about increased negativity towards politicians and its relationship to developments in political communication. We take a postholing approach to sampling of the diaries, enabling comparative-static analysis between the middle and end of the twentieth century. We view the diaries in a geographical framework derived from contextual theories of social action. This gives us a focus on spaces of political encounter, modes of political interaction, performances by politicians, and judgements by citizens. We argue that prominent spaces of political encounter changed over the period from long radio speeches and rowdy political meetings to televised debates and associated expert commentary. We demonstrate how these latter settings for political interaction afforded less opportunity for politicians to perform virtues to citizens, and for citizens to calibrate judgements of politicians.
13-23
Clarke, Nicholas
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Jennings, Will
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Moss, Jonathan
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Stoker, Gerry
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January 2017
Clarke, Nicholas
4ed65752-5210-4f9e-aeff-9188520510e8
Jennings, Will
2ab3f11c-eb7f-44c6-9ef2-3180c1a954f7
Moss, Jonathan
e5478a0e-3666-4d70-84ed-dc4bba11784d
Stoker, Gerry
209ba619-6a65-4bc1-9235-cba0d826bfd9
Clarke, Nicholas, Jennings, Will, Moss, Jonathan and Stoker, Gerry
(2017)
Changing spaces of political encounter and the rise of anti-politics: evidence from Mass Observation's General Election diaries.
Political Geography, 56 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2016.10.004).
Abstract
Negativity towards the institutions of formal politics is currently a concern across much of the democratic world. It is generally agreed that such negativity increased among British citizens during the second half of the twentieth century. In this paper, we analyse a novel dataset not previously used to study this topic: Mass Observation’s General Election diaries. Since diarists wrote mostly about politicians, political campaigns, and associated media coverage, we ask specifically what the diaries can tell us about increased negativity towards politicians and its relationship to developments in political communication. We take a postholing approach to sampling of the diaries, enabling comparative-static analysis between the middle and end of the twentieth century. We view the diaries in a geographical framework derived from contextual theories of social action. This gives us a focus on spaces of political encounter, modes of political interaction, performances by politicians, and judgements by citizens. We argue that prominent spaces of political encounter changed over the period from long radio speeches and rowdy political meetings to televised debates and associated expert commentary. We demonstrate how these latter settings for political interaction afforded less opportunity for politicians to perform virtues to citizens, and for citizens to calibrate judgements of politicians.
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 October 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 November 2016
Published date: January 2017
Organisations:
Geography & Environment
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Local EPrints ID: 401961
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401961
ISSN: 0962-6298
PURE UUID: 3e0e4c36-901f-4a4b-8e13-81af845992ac
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Date deposited: 26 Oct 2016 08:49
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:00
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Author:
Jonathan Moss
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