1st Edition

The Haider Phenomenon

By Anton Pelinka Copyright 2002
    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    Austria does not often make political headlines. It has at least twice in recent years: in 1986, when the "Waldheim Affair" was debated worldwide, and in 1999, when the Austrian Freedom Party (FPOe) under Joerg Haider received 27 percent of the vote in national elections. Established by former Nazis for former Nazis, the FPOe entered the mainstream of Austrian politics when it became part of a coalition government. This volume explores whether its rise is a uniquely Austrian phenomenon or corresponds to broader social and political changes in Europe.Parallels to Haider's party can be found in other European countries. Its anti-immigration agenda and rhetoric are similar to those of the French FN, the Belgian Vlaams Bloc, and the Italian Lega Nord. And its anti-European Union posture is similar to the sentiments of the "anti-Maastrich" wing of the British conservative party. However, European reaction to the FPOe's rise derives not only from its policies, but its linkage to past suspicions that the Austrians have not learned the lessons of history as had the Germans. The FPOe's success strengthened that impression. In response, 14 European Union governments downgraded their bilateral relations with the Austrian government to a purely technical level. Although the sanctions were lifted in September 2000, the spotlight is still very much on Austria, and concern about the FPOe remains high.This important volume contains eleven chapters by internationally prominent scholars from a broad spectrum of the social sciences. Its cross-disciplinary approach provides perspective on the Haider phenomenon, its rhetoric, and its impact on daily life in Austria. It also analyzes the influence of right-wing populism on politics, culture, and society, and its implications in Austria as well as elsewhere in Europe. The Haider Phenomenon will be of interest to historians, political scientists, those in European studies, and scholars in contemporary political extremism.

    Part 1; 1: FPÖ, ÖVP, and Austria’s Nazi Past; 2: The FPÖ, Foreigners, and Racism in the Haider Era; 3: Discourse and Politics: The Rhetoric of Exclusion; 4: Who the Hell is Jörg Haider?; 5: A Man for All Seasons: An Anthropological Perspective on Public Representation and Cultural Politics of the Austrian Freedom Party; Part 2; 6: Austrian Exceptionalism: Haider, the European Union, the Austrian Past and Present; 7: Haider–The New Symbolic Element of the Ongoing Discourse of the Past; 8: Anti-Foreigner Campaigns in the Austrian Freedom Party and Italian Northern League: The Discursive Construction of Identity *; Part 3; 9: Austria all Black and Blue: 1 Jörg Haider, the European Sanctions, and the Political Crisis in Austria; 10: The FPÖ in the European Context; 11: Constructing the Boundaries of the Volk: Nation-Building and National Populism in Austrian Politics

    Biography

    Anton Pelinka