ACADEMY OF MARXISM CHINESE ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
中文
Home>English>Scholars’ Profiles
From the End of History to the Populist Turn and Beyond:Ideology’s Misfortunes in Globalization Theory and Global Activism
     Release time: 2021-05-02

 

 

Rafal Soborski

Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Richmond: The American International University in London, London, UK

ABSTRACT

This article maps the development of the debate on globalization and ideology since “end of history” moment in the 1990s, through the 2008 financial crash, until the current ascendance of the populist right. The first part introduces the concept of ideology and engages with the “end of ideology” thesis advanced by exponents of neoliberalism and often echoed by their challengers on the left. The second part highlights some of the adverse implications of this disdain for ideology in anti-neoliberal movements and their substitutive fixation with prefigurative politics. Finally, the third part considers the ongoing populist wave. My argument is that populist claims are articulated as components of established ideologies and need to be challenged in light of their hosts’ core beliefs. This dovetails with my critique of the tendency of some scholars to dismiss widely recognizable ideological categories and instead proliferate new-fangled isms illsuited to provide orientation on the ideological terrain. The article concludes by taking a glimpse into the possible futures of ideology and the prospects for a revival of progressive politics. It posits that the left needs to reconnect with its rich intellectual history and thereby reclaim its once unsurpassed ability to project compelling ideological visions.

 

KEYWORDS

Ideology; anti-neoliberalism; prefiguration; populism

 

From: International Critical Thought 2020 10 (2)

Editor: Wang Yi

 

Related Articles