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Insecurity narratives and implicit emotional appeals in French competing populisms

Insecurity narratives and implicit emotional appeals in French competing populisms
Insecurity narratives and implicit emotional appeals in French competing populisms
The salience of security concerns has dramatically increased across Europe and a growing body of research converges on their acknowledgement as contributing factors to populist success. As the empirical focus of existing research is on the populist right and on negative emotionality, this paper questions to what extent the populism-(in)security nexus is indeed distinctive to the right and predominantly underpinned by fear-based appeals. By adopting a novel typology of insecurity-framing and a qualitative strategy that infers emotions from core relational themes, the paper explores the implicit emotional content of populist insecurity narratives in France, looking at campaign communication from Marine Le Pen and Jean-Luc Mélenchon. The article offers three contributions. First, by mapping which emotions underpin their insecurity narratives, it illustrates how these populist actors perform ‘emotional governance’, addressing the number of ontological insecurities generally linked to populist voting. Second, it shows that not only exclusionary but also inclusionary populists engage with processes of threat framing and do so with overlapping overarching themes. Finally, it proposes a qualitative approach that captures the holistic meaning of emotions via the methodological use of core relational themes, complementing word-based analyses.
1351-1610
86-106
Bonansinga, Donatella
864692cb-5d6b-4b72-bdbe-4a1fe5d0b6e5
Bonansinga, Donatella
864692cb-5d6b-4b72-bdbe-4a1fe5d0b6e5

Bonansinga, Donatella (2021) Insecurity narratives and implicit emotional appeals in French competing populisms. Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research, 35 (1), 86-106. (doi:10.1080/13511610.2021.1964349).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The salience of security concerns has dramatically increased across Europe and a growing body of research converges on their acknowledgement as contributing factors to populist success. As the empirical focus of existing research is on the populist right and on negative emotionality, this paper questions to what extent the populism-(in)security nexus is indeed distinctive to the right and predominantly underpinned by fear-based appeals. By adopting a novel typology of insecurity-framing and a qualitative strategy that infers emotions from core relational themes, the paper explores the implicit emotional content of populist insecurity narratives in France, looking at campaign communication from Marine Le Pen and Jean-Luc Mélenchon. The article offers three contributions. First, by mapping which emotions underpin their insecurity narratives, it illustrates how these populist actors perform ‘emotional governance’, addressing the number of ontological insecurities generally linked to populist voting. Second, it shows that not only exclusionary but also inclusionary populists engage with processes of threat framing and do so with overlapping overarching themes. Finally, it proposes a qualitative approach that captures the holistic meaning of emotions via the methodological use of core relational themes, complementing word-based analyses.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 July 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 August 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498944
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498944
ISSN: 1351-1610
PURE UUID: 58911e27-8773-490c-954d-198c9f307107
ORCID for Donatella Bonansinga: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1968-0811

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Date deposited: 05 Mar 2025 17:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:45

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Author: Donatella Bonansinga ORCID iD

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