The people in the ‘here and now’: populism, modernization and the state in Greece

The term ‘populism’ has gained renewed prominence in Greece during the Eurozone crisis, in both public and academic debates. In this article I conceptualize populism as a discourse of territorial and temporal particularism, which challenges the way a state has been incorporated into the internationa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chryssogelos, Angelos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/5182/3/Chryssogelos_Populism-in-Greece_IPSR_2017.pdf
Description
Summary:The term ‘populism’ has gained renewed prominence in Greece during the Eurozone crisis, in both public and academic debates. In this article I conceptualize populism as a discourse of territorial and temporal particularism, which challenges the way a state has been incorporated into the international political and economic system. Based on this definition, I question whether oppositional discourses employed by partisan actors or official power are wholesale and genuine expressions of populism. Thus, I contest the notion that Greece failed due to populism. Instead I draw attention to a failure in the official legitimation of modernization by state elites that long preceded the crisis.