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Anti-Sorosism: Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Standard

Anti-Sorosism: Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'. / Wodak, Ruth; Richardson, John E.
Conspiracy Theory Discourses. ed. / Massimiliano Demata; Virginia Zorzi; Angela Zottola. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2022. p. 395-420 (DAPSAC; Vol. 98).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Wodak, R & Richardson, JE 2022, Anti-Sorosism: Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'. in M Demata, V Zorzi & A Zottola (eds), Conspiracy Theory Discourses. DAPSAC, vol. 98, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 395-420.

APA

Wodak, R., & Richardson, J. E. (2022). Anti-Sorosism: Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'. In M. Demata, V. Zorzi, & A. Zottola (Eds.), Conspiracy Theory Discourses (pp. 395-420). (DAPSAC; Vol. 98). John Benjamins.

Vancouver

Wodak R, Richardson JE. Anti-Sorosism: Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'. In Demata M, Zorzi V, Zottola A, editors, Conspiracy Theory Discourses. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. 2022. p. 395-420. (DAPSAC).

Author

Wodak, Ruth ; Richardson, John E. / Anti-Sorosism : Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'. Conspiracy Theory Discourses. editor / Massimiliano Demata ; Virginia Zorzi ; Angela Zottola. Amsterdam : John Benjamins, 2022. pp. 395-420 (DAPSAC).

Bibtex

@inbook{c60a48a622024721896189207c611432,
title = "Anti-Sorosism: Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'",
abstract = "This chapter presents a Discourse-Historical Analysis (DHA) of the antisemitic conspiracy theory at the heart of {\textquoteleft}anti-Sorosism{\textquoteright}. Anti-Sorosism is a term used to label the global campaign against George Soros, a Jewish US-American philanthropist of Hungarian origin, launched by extreme-right activists (see Wodak 2020a). We argue that anti-Sorosism is a modern synecdoche of the antisemitic {\textquoteleft}Jewish world conspiracy{\textquoteright}. In addition to extreme-right individuals and organizations, several mainstream right-wing politicians have blamed George Soros for many complex global and local phenomena such as migration, the political decisions of the EU, the COVID pandemic, and so forth. Indeed, the Hungarianprime minister Viktor Orb{\'a}n has instrumentalized Soros time and again as a Feindbild [enemy image] when campaigning against the rules and regulations of the European Union as well as when justifying and legitimizing his restrictive immigration policies.In this chapter, we will first briefly trace the origins of this archetypical conspiracy theory throughout the 19th and 20th centuries up to the present. The chapter then turns to a case study examining posters produced by Hungary{\textquoteright}s governing party Fidesz. Following a summary of the DHA and contextualization of the politics of Fidesz, and its leader Viktor Orb{\'a}n, we then proceed tothe multimodal discourse analysis of a series of posters produced and displayed in Hungary. We conclude by arguing that conspiracy theories help to simplify complex issues and to provide clearly separated Manichean divisions of the {\textquoteleft}innocent{\textquoteright} and of those {\textquoteleft}to blame{\textquoteright}. ",
keywords = "conspiracy theories, antisemitism, soros, Orban, press conferences, world conspiracy",
author = "Ruth Wodak and Richardson, {John E.}",
year = "2022",
month = nov,
day = "15",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789027212702",
series = "DAPSAC",
publisher = "John Benjamins",
pages = "395--420",
editor = "Massimiliano Demata and Virginia Zorzi and Angela Zottola",
booktitle = "Conspiracy Theory Discourses",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Anti-Sorosism

T2 - Reviving the 'Jewish World Conspiracy'

AU - Wodak, Ruth

AU - Richardson, John E.

PY - 2022/11/15

Y1 - 2022/11/15

N2 - This chapter presents a Discourse-Historical Analysis (DHA) of the antisemitic conspiracy theory at the heart of ‘anti-Sorosism’. Anti-Sorosism is a term used to label the global campaign against George Soros, a Jewish US-American philanthropist of Hungarian origin, launched by extreme-right activists (see Wodak 2020a). We argue that anti-Sorosism is a modern synecdoche of the antisemitic ‘Jewish world conspiracy’. In addition to extreme-right individuals and organizations, several mainstream right-wing politicians have blamed George Soros for many complex global and local phenomena such as migration, the political decisions of the EU, the COVID pandemic, and so forth. Indeed, the Hungarianprime minister Viktor Orbán has instrumentalized Soros time and again as a Feindbild [enemy image] when campaigning against the rules and regulations of the European Union as well as when justifying and legitimizing his restrictive immigration policies.In this chapter, we will first briefly trace the origins of this archetypical conspiracy theory throughout the 19th and 20th centuries up to the present. The chapter then turns to a case study examining posters produced by Hungary’s governing party Fidesz. Following a summary of the DHA and contextualization of the politics of Fidesz, and its leader Viktor Orbán, we then proceed tothe multimodal discourse analysis of a series of posters produced and displayed in Hungary. We conclude by arguing that conspiracy theories help to simplify complex issues and to provide clearly separated Manichean divisions of the ‘innocent’ and of those ‘to blame’.

AB - This chapter presents a Discourse-Historical Analysis (DHA) of the antisemitic conspiracy theory at the heart of ‘anti-Sorosism’. Anti-Sorosism is a term used to label the global campaign against George Soros, a Jewish US-American philanthropist of Hungarian origin, launched by extreme-right activists (see Wodak 2020a). We argue that anti-Sorosism is a modern synecdoche of the antisemitic ‘Jewish world conspiracy’. In addition to extreme-right individuals and organizations, several mainstream right-wing politicians have blamed George Soros for many complex global and local phenomena such as migration, the political decisions of the EU, the COVID pandemic, and so forth. Indeed, the Hungarianprime minister Viktor Orbán has instrumentalized Soros time and again as a Feindbild [enemy image] when campaigning against the rules and regulations of the European Union as well as when justifying and legitimizing his restrictive immigration policies.In this chapter, we will first briefly trace the origins of this archetypical conspiracy theory throughout the 19th and 20th centuries up to the present. The chapter then turns to a case study examining posters produced by Hungary’s governing party Fidesz. Following a summary of the DHA and contextualization of the politics of Fidesz, and its leader Viktor Orbán, we then proceed tothe multimodal discourse analysis of a series of posters produced and displayed in Hungary. We conclude by arguing that conspiracy theories help to simplify complex issues and to provide clearly separated Manichean divisions of the ‘innocent’ and of those ‘to blame’.

KW - conspiracy theories

KW - antisemitism

KW - soros

KW - Orban

KW - press conferences

KW - world conspiracy

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9789027212702

T3 - DAPSAC

SP - 395

EP - 420

BT - Conspiracy Theory Discourses

A2 - Demata, Massimiliano

A2 - Zorzi, Virginia

A2 - Zottola, Angela

PB - John Benjamins

CY - Amsterdam

ER -