In doing so it will provide fresh insights for students and scholars of sociology, social psychology, discourse analysis, media and communication, and political science. Its multilevel perspective aims to further the understanding of how the anti-immigration and anti-multiculturalist ideologies propagated by these parties contributes to the mainstreaming of their rhetoric among the political ‘elite’, as well as to the societal normalization of nationalist and xenophobic discourse. Operating in countries with comparatively high national internet and social media penetration, this book explores the extent to which the success of these parties is linked to their skillful use of social media, in order to mobilise popular support for their political agendas. Drawing on empirical material from the Nordic context allows for an analysis of political discourse within societies in which a strong tradition of social democratic welfare states now exists alongside the rise of populist and far-right parties. It brings together the latest research from sociology and media studies concerning the circulation of far-right messages in the era of digitalization and the ‘hybrid media system’, and critical discursive psychology research into political and lay discourse pertaining to multiculturalism. This edited collection employs a discursive psychology approach to examine how far-right discourse on issues related to multiculturalism is received, interpreted, adapted and contested in political and institutionalized rhetoric (in the form of news media material, political debates, blogs, social media and party websites) as well as grassroots-level, everyday talk in online as well as offline settings. (Palgrave Studies in Discursive Psychology) 200 pp. ![]() The Far-Right Discourse of Multiculturalism in Everyday Talk: Reproduction and Contestation in the Nordic Context. ![]() Pettersson, Katarina / Nortio, Emma (eds.),
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