Description
This paper explores the way in which racism can become a live issue in political debate on issues of immigration, and in particular how both being heard to be racist and being heard to make an accusation of racism are oriented to as difficult positions. Building on previous research on the discursive management of racism, the dialogical complexities of ‘racism’ are explored through a single case analysis of an exchange between the British politicians Tim Farron, Suzanne Evans and Ken Clarke on BBC Radio 4’s political discussion programme Any Questions during the 2015 General Election campaign. In exploring an extended sequence of debate, the analysis highlights a number of strategies through which the spectre of racism is both raised and resisted, and in particular focusses on the way in which a discussion that could have focussed on policies advocated by Nigel Farage, then the leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP; a radical right political party that has been influential in recent years in the UK), becomes as much about the legitimacy of accusations of racism themselves. Racism is thus not simply a problem for Evans – who defends Farage – but also for Clarke, who is explicitly criticising Farage’s policies on ‘race and immigration’. Implications for discursive psychological analyses of political discourse in an age of populist politics are discussed.| Period | 2 Feb 2022 |
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| Event title | Mobility, Citizenship and Empowerment-Disempowerment |
| Event type | Workshop |
| Degree of Recognition | International |