6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1267a27
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Discursive Constructions of White Nordic Masculinities in Right-wing Populist Media
Ovidiu Cristian NorocelOvidiu Cristian NorocelTuuli LähdesmäkiTuija SaresmaMaria Ruotsalainensubject
HistoryLiterature and Literary TheorySociology and Political ScienceCommunication studiesPoison controlintersektionaalisuus050109 social psychologySuperordinate goalsRuotsipopulismiGender StudiesCritical discourse analysismaskuliinisuusäärioikeistolaisuusSuomi0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologyFinlandIntersectionalitySwedenWhite (horse)right-wing populism05 social sciencesGender studiescritical discourse analysisHistopathologie16. Peace & justicesuperordinate intersectionalitydiskurssianalyysiPopulism050903 gender studiessukupuoliroolitSystématique des espèces [zoologie]0509 other social sciencesHegemonic masculinitydescription
Using superordinate intersectionality as a theoretical framework, this article explores notions of men and masculinities within right wing populism. It is attentive to how the right-wing populist media in Finland and Sweden construct white Nordic masculinities through discursive interactions across several axes of difference: gender (masculinities); sexuality (heterosexuality); social class (elites); and race (whitenesses). Employing Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) as methodological approach, we show how the discursive constructions of white Nordic masculinities are context contingent, rendering them subject to constant reinterpretation and repositioning, at times privileging some axes of social structuring over others. By drawing out the subtle similarities and discrete differences embedded in the discursive constructions of right-wing populist media, our approach gives a more fine-grained understanding of the nuance to men and masculinities in the study of right wing populism. By focusing on the European Nordic semi-periphery, our comparative analysis makes an original contribution, not only to the masculinities literature in general, but also to the growing scholarship concerned with the `crisis of masculinity' in the wider context of neoliberal globalizing tendencies. © 2018, The Author(s) 2018.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-06-04 | Men and Masculinities |