The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society. / Villadsen, Lisa Storm.

2017. Abstract fra Rhetoric Society of America 2018, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Villadsen, LS 2017, 'The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society', Rhetoric Society of America 2018, Minneapolis, USA, 31/05/2018 - 03/06/2018.

APA

Villadsen, L. S. (Accepteret/In press). The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society. Abstract fra Rhetoric Society of America 2018, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Vancouver

Villadsen LS. The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society. 2017. Abstract fra Rhetoric Society of America 2018, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Author

Villadsen, Lisa Storm. / The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society. Abstract fra Rhetoric Society of America 2018, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Bibtex

@conference{03009a05a69c4d8188720479219b3cd3,
title = "The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society",
abstract = "Denmark is known as a social welfare society with a very high degree of social trust and an even higher ranking in happiness ratings. Nevertheless the classic populist topos of {\textquoteleft}elite{\textquoteright} versus {\textquoteleft}people{\textquoteright} has entered public Danish discourse in recent years. This paper explores how and where the notion of {\textquoteleft}the elite{\textquoteright} has emerged and attempts to establish its meaning and the rhetorical work its used to perform. In particular, I examine a recently published book by a Social Democractic member of the Danish Parliament bearing a title that translates to: “The Tyranni of the Educated – How the Creative Class Creates Inequality and Undermines the World{\textquoteright}s Best Society”. I then discuss examples of public discourse that seeks to challenge the notion of the elite and its negative connotations and discuss their prospects of succeeding in this endeavor in a summarizing theoretization of rhetoric{\textquoteright}s potential as a source for resisting populist discourse. ",
author = "Villadsen, {Lisa Storm}",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 31-05-2018 Through 03-06-2018",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The discourse of elite vs. people in a social welfare society

AU - Villadsen, Lisa Storm

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Denmark is known as a social welfare society with a very high degree of social trust and an even higher ranking in happiness ratings. Nevertheless the classic populist topos of ‘elite’ versus ‘people’ has entered public Danish discourse in recent years. This paper explores how and where the notion of ‘the elite’ has emerged and attempts to establish its meaning and the rhetorical work its used to perform. In particular, I examine a recently published book by a Social Democractic member of the Danish Parliament bearing a title that translates to: “The Tyranni of the Educated – How the Creative Class Creates Inequality and Undermines the World’s Best Society”. I then discuss examples of public discourse that seeks to challenge the notion of the elite and its negative connotations and discuss their prospects of succeeding in this endeavor in a summarizing theoretization of rhetoric’s potential as a source for resisting populist discourse.

AB - Denmark is known as a social welfare society with a very high degree of social trust and an even higher ranking in happiness ratings. Nevertheless the classic populist topos of ‘elite’ versus ‘people’ has entered public Danish discourse in recent years. This paper explores how and where the notion of ‘the elite’ has emerged and attempts to establish its meaning and the rhetorical work its used to perform. In particular, I examine a recently published book by a Social Democractic member of the Danish Parliament bearing a title that translates to: “The Tyranni of the Educated – How the Creative Class Creates Inequality and Undermines the World’s Best Society”. I then discuss examples of public discourse that seeks to challenge the notion of the elite and its negative connotations and discuss their prospects of succeeding in this endeavor in a summarizing theoretization of rhetoric’s potential as a source for resisting populist discourse.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 31 May 2018 through 3 June 2018

ER -

ID: 186526605