Enfrentar vírus como homem: Bolsonaro's populism and performing hegemonic masculinity during the COVID-19 pandemic
Enfrentar vírus como homem: Bolsonaro's populism and performing hegemonic masculinity during the COVID-19 pandemic
Even among the various Latin American leaders associated with populism, Jair Bolsonaro stands out as one of the most abrasive and extreme examples of the phenomenon. Adopting an interdisciplinary perspective that conceptualizes populism as a performed political style, this paper will engage with the specific practices and performances deployed by Bolsonaro, focusing more specifically on those related to the COVID-19 health crisis. In examining these performances, a central point is Bolsonaro’s reliance on a binary heteronormativity and gendered ethos which was further exacerbated by the urgency of the global pandemic. This paper will explore how, through his calls for the Brazilian people to “enfrentar vírus como homem e não como moleque”, Bolsonaro mobilizes hegemonic masculinity to infantilize those who fall sick while undermining criticisms of his problematic management of the pandemic. In this paper, we will develop a holistic analysis of several of Bolsonaro’s performances after the beginning of the COVID-19 health crisis in Brazil to assess the way he articulates his identity in his relationship with the people. We argue that performances of identity in the populist style are based on the projection of strength and health, which are associated in a conservative ideology with performing hegemonic masculinity and heteronormativity. Conversely, we demonstrate that associating femininity and queerness with weakness serves as the flip side of these gendered performances of identity. Lastly, by situating Bolsonaro’s own brand of populism in a history of uneven and unequal developments across gender, race, and class in a vast and complex country such as Brazil, the concluding aim of this paper is to consider crisis-making practices in populist politics in the context of a global health crisis that Bolsonaro was ideologically ill-equipped to tackle.
Champion, Giulia
1eea3a93-f0d1-44e0-a438-ead183ea6f62
Aiolfi, Théo
445e63ef-c491-487d-8e97-54edbf117820
1 June 2023
Champion, Giulia
1eea3a93-f0d1-44e0-a438-ead183ea6f62
Aiolfi, Théo
445e63ef-c491-487d-8e97-54edbf117820
Champion, Giulia and Aiolfi, Théo
(2023)
Enfrentar vírus como homem: Bolsonaro's populism and performing hegemonic masculinity during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In,
Pereira, Anthony W.
(ed.)
Right-Wing Populism in Latin America and Beyond.
(Conceptualising Comparative Politics)
1st ed.
Routledge.
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Even among the various Latin American leaders associated with populism, Jair Bolsonaro stands out as one of the most abrasive and extreme examples of the phenomenon. Adopting an interdisciplinary perspective that conceptualizes populism as a performed political style, this paper will engage with the specific practices and performances deployed by Bolsonaro, focusing more specifically on those related to the COVID-19 health crisis. In examining these performances, a central point is Bolsonaro’s reliance on a binary heteronormativity and gendered ethos which was further exacerbated by the urgency of the global pandemic. This paper will explore how, through his calls for the Brazilian people to “enfrentar vírus como homem e não como moleque”, Bolsonaro mobilizes hegemonic masculinity to infantilize those who fall sick while undermining criticisms of his problematic management of the pandemic. In this paper, we will develop a holistic analysis of several of Bolsonaro’s performances after the beginning of the COVID-19 health crisis in Brazil to assess the way he articulates his identity in his relationship with the people. We argue that performances of identity in the populist style are based on the projection of strength and health, which are associated in a conservative ideology with performing hegemonic masculinity and heteronormativity. Conversely, we demonstrate that associating femininity and queerness with weakness serves as the flip side of these gendered performances of identity. Lastly, by situating Bolsonaro’s own brand of populism in a history of uneven and unequal developments across gender, race, and class in a vast and complex country such as Brazil, the concluding aim of this paper is to consider crisis-making practices in populist politics in the context of a global health crisis that Bolsonaro was ideologically ill-equipped to tackle.
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Published date: 1 June 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 480263
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480263
PURE UUID: 236a3244-a8d5-4140-95af-e6fa196469a0
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:13
Last modified: 01 Aug 2023 17:13
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Contributors
Author:
Giulia Champion
Author:
Théo Aiolfi
Editor:
Anthony W. Pereira
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