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‘Austria First’ revisited: a diachronic cross-sectional analysis of the gender and body politics of the extreme right

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‘Austria First’ revisited: a diachronic cross-sectional analysis of the gender and body politics of the extreme right. / Rheindorf, Markus; Wodak, Ruth.
In: Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 53, No. 3, 27.05.2019, p. 302-320.

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Rheindorf M, Wodak R. ‘Austria First’ revisited: a diachronic cross-sectional analysis of the gender and body politics of the extreme right. Patterns of Prejudice. 2019 May 27;53(3):302-320. doi: 10.1080/0031322X.2019.1595392

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@article{3bb3272c13df4a3a8f72d92a5e51519f,
title = "{\textquoteleft}Austria First{\textquoteright} revisited: a diachronic cross-sectional analysis of the gender and body politics of the extreme right",
abstract = "In this paper, Rheindorf and Wodak provide a discourse-historical analysis of extreme-right cultural politics in Austria, ranging from the blatant racism in the speeches of Vienna's former Deputy Mayor Johann Gudenus (now MP in the Austrian parliament) to the construction of an idealized national body in the election campaigns of the Freiheitliche Partei {\"O}sterreichs (FP{\"O}), its programmatic agenda in handbooks and pamphlets, and the performances of far-right pop singer Andreas Gabalier. Rheindorf and Wodak argue that such cultural politics use a wide spectrum of discursive strategies both inside and outside established party politics and that the accompanying production of an ideal extreme-right subject is informed by nativist ideology. The cross-sectional analysis demonstrates that the cultural politics of the Austrian extreme right ranges from appropriated national symbols to coded National Socialist iconography. These politics pervasively construct a gendered and racialized national body, policed by a 'strict father' and nurtured by a 'self-sacrificing mother', vis-{\`a}-vis an apocalyptic threat scenario identified with migration, intellectual and political elites, cosmopolitanism and progressive gender politics.",
author = "Markus Rheindorf and Ruth Wodak",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1080/0031322X.2019.1595392",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
pages = "302--320",
journal = "Patterns of Prejudice",
issn = "0031-322X",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - ‘Austria First’ revisited

T2 - a diachronic cross-sectional analysis of the gender and body politics of the extreme right

AU - Rheindorf, Markus

AU - Wodak, Ruth

PY - 2019/5/27

Y1 - 2019/5/27

N2 - In this paper, Rheindorf and Wodak provide a discourse-historical analysis of extreme-right cultural politics in Austria, ranging from the blatant racism in the speeches of Vienna's former Deputy Mayor Johann Gudenus (now MP in the Austrian parliament) to the construction of an idealized national body in the election campaigns of the Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs (FPÖ), its programmatic agenda in handbooks and pamphlets, and the performances of far-right pop singer Andreas Gabalier. Rheindorf and Wodak argue that such cultural politics use a wide spectrum of discursive strategies both inside and outside established party politics and that the accompanying production of an ideal extreme-right subject is informed by nativist ideology. The cross-sectional analysis demonstrates that the cultural politics of the Austrian extreme right ranges from appropriated national symbols to coded National Socialist iconography. These politics pervasively construct a gendered and racialized national body, policed by a 'strict father' and nurtured by a 'self-sacrificing mother', vis-à-vis an apocalyptic threat scenario identified with migration, intellectual and political elites, cosmopolitanism and progressive gender politics.

AB - In this paper, Rheindorf and Wodak provide a discourse-historical analysis of extreme-right cultural politics in Austria, ranging from the blatant racism in the speeches of Vienna's former Deputy Mayor Johann Gudenus (now MP in the Austrian parliament) to the construction of an idealized national body in the election campaigns of the Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs (FPÖ), its programmatic agenda in handbooks and pamphlets, and the performances of far-right pop singer Andreas Gabalier. Rheindorf and Wodak argue that such cultural politics use a wide spectrum of discursive strategies both inside and outside established party politics and that the accompanying production of an ideal extreme-right subject is informed by nativist ideology. The cross-sectional analysis demonstrates that the cultural politics of the Austrian extreme right ranges from appropriated national symbols to coded National Socialist iconography. These politics pervasively construct a gendered and racialized national body, policed by a 'strict father' and nurtured by a 'self-sacrificing mother', vis-à-vis an apocalyptic threat scenario identified with migration, intellectual and political elites, cosmopolitanism and progressive gender politics.

U2 - 10.1080/0031322X.2019.1595392

DO - 10.1080/0031322X.2019.1595392

M3 - Journal article

VL - 53

SP - 302

EP - 320

JO - Patterns of Prejudice

JF - Patterns of Prejudice

SN - 0031-322X

IS - 3

ER -