Article published In: Public Debates on Immigration
Edited by Andreas Musolff
[Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 5:2] 2017
► pp. 251–273
“We mustn’t fool ourselves”
‘Orbánian’ discourse in the political battle over the refugee crisis and European identity
Published online: 23 November 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.5.2.05bol
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.5.2.05bol
Abstract
The historic wave of refugees reaching Europe in 2015 was met with a volatile mixture of ethno-nationalist, anti-Muslim fearmongering and political infighting within the European Union (EU). Perhaps no one was more influential in promulgating fear and anti-refugee sentiment than Viktor Orbán, the Prime Minister of Hungary, whose inflammatory rhetoric and uncompromising, illiberal political stance helped escalate the refugee-crisis in a discursive battle of political wills, ideologies, and identity politics within the EU. This paper explores how Orbán employs political discourse practices and strategies to enact his right-wing populist (RWP) ideology and anti-immigrant ‘politics of fear’ (. 2015. The Politics of Fear: What Right-Wing Populist Discourses Mean. London: SAGE. ) vis-à-vis EU politicians’ pro-migration discourses. Adopting a broad critical discourse-analytic approach, we demonstrate Orbán’s iterative production of discourses of threat and defense underlying discourses of fear (law and order, cultural/religious difference), and discourses of oppositional political identities and ideologies through fractal recursion. We argue that recursive performance of RWP stances creates a recognizable political style characteristic of Orbán’s RWP political persona or type.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Brief overview of political context and refugee crisis
- 3.Literature review
- 3.1Immigration discourses
- 3.2Discourses of right-wing populism
- 4.Theoretical framework
- 5.Methodology
- 6.Qualitative results on discourses of fear
- 6.1Law and order
- 6.2Cultural and religious othering
- 7.Political identity discourses
- 7.1Self-representation of RWP political identity: Appeal to the people
- 7.2Political other-representation of the EU and ‘liberals’
- 8.Discussion and conclusion
- Notes
References
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