The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure

Although emotions are linked to irrationality, a number of recent researches have shown emotions are central to political behaviour. While as politics is an emotionally dense sphere of individual and collective action, any fuller comprehension of the political imaginary must ponder it. This paper...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Samuel Mateus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mimesis Edizioni, Milano 2020-02-01
Series:Im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary
Online Access:http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/IMAGO/article/view/2409
id doaj-85446be80adf47f6ae6d019bd475ef0e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-85446be80adf47f6ae6d019bd475ef0e2020-11-25T03:48:32ZengMimesis Edizioni, MilanoIm@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary2281-81382281-81382020-02-010142853021920The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structureSamuel Mateus0<div class="page" title="Page 1"> <div class="section"> <div class="layoutArea"> <div class="column"> <p><span>Labcom; ICNOVA | Madeira University</span></p> </div> </div> </div> </div>Although emotions are linked to irrationality, a number of recent researches have shown emotions are central to political behaviour. While as politics is an emotionally dense sphere of individual and collective action, any fuller comprehension of the political imaginary must ponder it. This paper considers the emotional dimension of the political imaginary according to a dual rhetorical instance: the use of emotions as tools (emotional appeals) to influence behaviour and thinking; and the very affective nature of politics as such. In other words, I will examine affects as rhetorical means and as structuring elements of the political imaginary. By referring to empirical political messages – from the Daisy Ad until the election of the comedian actor Volodymyr Zelensky as President of Ukraine - it is claimed that the political imaginary is not just about collective reasoning. The political imaginary is also something that we feel. This paper intends to clarify how affects help to determine collective feeling and, consequently, political decision making and social understandinghttp://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/IMAGO/article/view/2409
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samuel Mateus
spellingShingle Samuel Mateus
The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
Im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary
author_facet Samuel Mateus
author_sort Samuel Mateus
title The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
title_short The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
title_full The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
title_fullStr The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
title_full_unstemmed The Double Instance of the Political. Imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
title_sort double instance of the political. imaginary – affects as rhetorical means and structure
publisher Mimesis Edizioni, Milano
series Im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary
issn 2281-8138
2281-8138
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Although emotions are linked to irrationality, a number of recent researches have shown emotions are central to political behaviour. While as politics is an emotionally dense sphere of individual and collective action, any fuller comprehension of the political imaginary must ponder it. This paper considers the emotional dimension of the political imaginary according to a dual rhetorical instance: the use of emotions as tools (emotional appeals) to influence behaviour and thinking; and the very affective nature of politics as such. In other words, I will examine affects as rhetorical means and as structuring elements of the political imaginary. By referring to empirical political messages – from the Daisy Ad until the election of the comedian actor Volodymyr Zelensky as President of Ukraine - it is claimed that the political imaginary is not just about collective reasoning. The political imaginary is also something that we feel. This paper intends to clarify how affects help to determine collective feeling and, consequently, political decision making and social understanding
url http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/IMAGO/article/view/2409
work_keys_str_mv AT samuelmateus thedoubleinstanceofthepoliticalimaginaryaffectsasrhetoricalmeansandstructure
AT samuelmateus doubleinstanceofthepoliticalimaginaryaffectsasrhetoricalmeansandstructure
_version_ 1724498528327172096