Sour grapes: ressentiment as the affective response of grievance politics
Sour grapes: ressentiment as the affective response of grievance politics
This article examines the psychological orientations and political preferences of citizens ‘inressentiment’, a particular psychological state that is a characteristic feature of contemporary grievance politics. Similarly to the Fox in Aesop’s ‘Fable of the sour grapes’, in ressentiment the value of an impotent self and a desirable but unattainable object change to a morally superior self and an unwanted object, while maintaining an aura of victimhood [Demertzis, 2020. The Political Sociology of Emotions. Essays on Trauma and Ressentiment. London: Routledge; Salmela and Capelos, 2021. “Ressentiment: A Complex Emotion or an Emotional Mechanism of Psychic Defences?” Politics and Governance 9 (3): 191–203]. The complex conceptualization of ressentiment often deters its empirical operationalization, and explains the lack of available instruments. We address this double empirical lacuna by presenting a novel 6-item scale of ressentiment launched in the 7th Round of the World Value Survey in Greece, and applying it to examine its political manifestations in a populist European context. Our findings point to its toxic and complex hostile emotionality that extends beyond anger, its low efficacy and negative relationship with political knowledge and scientific evidence, its reliance on conservation and reactionary values and its aversion to emancipatory values, its inactive political stance, and its hollow social contact and precarious collective identities. We discuss the implications of recognizing ressentiment as a significant affective driver of far-right, populist, nativist, and nationalist politics.
core values, democracy, emotions, ressentiment, World Values Survey
107-129
Capelos, Tereza
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Demertzis, Nicolas
e37d29c2-b77a-4c3e-832b-35ee6a8e6af8
Capelos, Tereza
bd3b5744-cbcc-44a4-9b73-b088d82154e7
Demertzis, Nicolas
e37d29c2-b77a-4c3e-832b-35ee6a8e6af8
Capelos, Tereza and Demertzis, Nicolas
(2022)
Sour grapes: ressentiment as the affective response of grievance politics.
Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research, 35 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/13511610.2021.2023005).
Abstract
This article examines the psychological orientations and political preferences of citizens ‘inressentiment’, a particular psychological state that is a characteristic feature of contemporary grievance politics. Similarly to the Fox in Aesop’s ‘Fable of the sour grapes’, in ressentiment the value of an impotent self and a desirable but unattainable object change to a morally superior self and an unwanted object, while maintaining an aura of victimhood [Demertzis, 2020. The Political Sociology of Emotions. Essays on Trauma and Ressentiment. London: Routledge; Salmela and Capelos, 2021. “Ressentiment: A Complex Emotion or an Emotional Mechanism of Psychic Defences?” Politics and Governance 9 (3): 191–203]. The complex conceptualization of ressentiment often deters its empirical operationalization, and explains the lack of available instruments. We address this double empirical lacuna by presenting a novel 6-item scale of ressentiment launched in the 7th Round of the World Value Survey in Greece, and applying it to examine its political manifestations in a populist European context. Our findings point to its toxic and complex hostile emotionality that extends beyond anger, its low efficacy and negative relationship with political knowledge and scientific evidence, its reliance on conservation and reactionary values and its aversion to emancipatory values, its inactive political stance, and its hollow social contact and precarious collective identities. We discuss the implications of recognizing ressentiment as a significant affective driver of far-right, populist, nativist, and nationalist politics.
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Sour grapes ressentiment as the affective response of grievance politics
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 December 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 January 2022
Keywords:
core values, democracy, emotions, ressentiment, World Values Survey
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Local EPrints ID: 483249
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483249
ISSN: 1351-1610
PURE UUID: 9a4319e8-5d83-4e15-80bb-6a2c3f03390a
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Date deposited: 26 Oct 2023 16:59
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:15
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Author:
Tereza Capelos
Author:
Nicolas Demertzis
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