How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts

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How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts. / Doerr, Nicole.

In: Visual Communication, Vol. 16, No. 3, 01.08.2017, p. 315-336.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Doerr, N 2017, 'How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts', Visual Communication, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 315-336. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470357217702850

APA

Doerr, N. (2017). How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts. Visual Communication, 16(3), 315-336. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470357217702850

Vancouver

Doerr N. How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts. Visual Communication. 2017 Aug 1;16(3):315-336. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470357217702850

Author

Doerr, Nicole. / How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts. In: Visual Communication. 2017 ; Vol. 16, No. 3. pp. 315-336.

Bibtex

@article{43450d007e014a0bacabd1d18199018e,
title = "How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts",
abstract = "This article examines visual posters and symbols constructed and circulated transnationally by various political actors to mobilize contentious politics on the issues of immigration and citizenship. Following right-wing mobilizations focusing on the Syrian refugee crisis, immigration has become one of the most contentious political issues in Western Europe. Right-wing populist political parties have used provocative visual posters depicting immigrants or refugees as {\textquoteleft}criminal foreigners{\textquoteright} or a {\textquoteleft}threat to the nation{\textquoteright}, in some countries and contexts conflating the image of the immigrant with that of the Islamist terrorist. This article explores the transnational dynamics of visual mobilization by comparing the translation of right-wing nationalist with left-wing, cosmopolitan visual campaigns on the issue of immigration in Western Europe. The author first traces the crosscultural translation and sharing of an anti-immigrant poster created by the Swiss People{\textquoteright}s Party (SVP), a right-wing political party, inspiring different extremist as well as populist right-wing parties and grassroots activists in several other European countries. She then explores how left-libertarian social movements try to break racist stereotypes of immigrants. While right-wing political activists create a shared stereotypical image of immigrants as foes of an imaginary ethnonationalist citizenship, left-wing counter-images construct a more complex and nuanced imagery of citizenship and cultural diversity in Europe. The findings show the challenges of progressive activists{\textquoteright} attempts to translate cosmopolitan images of citizenship across different national and linguistic contexts in contrast to the right wing{\textquoteright}s rapid and effective instrumentalizing and translating of denigrating images of minorities in different contexts.",
keywords = "comparison left- and right-wing groups, immigrants{\textquoteright}, rights, social movements, transnational mobilization, visuals of immigrants",
author = "Nicole Doerr",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/1470357217702850",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "315--336",
journal = "Visual Communication",
issn = "1470-3572",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How right-wing versus cosmopolitan political actors mobilize and translate images of immigrants in transnational contexts

AU - Doerr, Nicole

PY - 2017/8/1

Y1 - 2017/8/1

N2 - This article examines visual posters and symbols constructed and circulated transnationally by various political actors to mobilize contentious politics on the issues of immigration and citizenship. Following right-wing mobilizations focusing on the Syrian refugee crisis, immigration has become one of the most contentious political issues in Western Europe. Right-wing populist political parties have used provocative visual posters depicting immigrants or refugees as ‘criminal foreigners’ or a ‘threat to the nation’, in some countries and contexts conflating the image of the immigrant with that of the Islamist terrorist. This article explores the transnational dynamics of visual mobilization by comparing the translation of right-wing nationalist with left-wing, cosmopolitan visual campaigns on the issue of immigration in Western Europe. The author first traces the crosscultural translation and sharing of an anti-immigrant poster created by the Swiss People’s Party (SVP), a right-wing political party, inspiring different extremist as well as populist right-wing parties and grassroots activists in several other European countries. She then explores how left-libertarian social movements try to break racist stereotypes of immigrants. While right-wing political activists create a shared stereotypical image of immigrants as foes of an imaginary ethnonationalist citizenship, left-wing counter-images construct a more complex and nuanced imagery of citizenship and cultural diversity in Europe. The findings show the challenges of progressive activists’ attempts to translate cosmopolitan images of citizenship across different national and linguistic contexts in contrast to the right wing’s rapid and effective instrumentalizing and translating of denigrating images of minorities in different contexts.

AB - This article examines visual posters and symbols constructed and circulated transnationally by various political actors to mobilize contentious politics on the issues of immigration and citizenship. Following right-wing mobilizations focusing on the Syrian refugee crisis, immigration has become one of the most contentious political issues in Western Europe. Right-wing populist political parties have used provocative visual posters depicting immigrants or refugees as ‘criminal foreigners’ or a ‘threat to the nation’, in some countries and contexts conflating the image of the immigrant with that of the Islamist terrorist. This article explores the transnational dynamics of visual mobilization by comparing the translation of right-wing nationalist with left-wing, cosmopolitan visual campaigns on the issue of immigration in Western Europe. The author first traces the crosscultural translation and sharing of an anti-immigrant poster created by the Swiss People’s Party (SVP), a right-wing political party, inspiring different extremist as well as populist right-wing parties and grassroots activists in several other European countries. She then explores how left-libertarian social movements try to break racist stereotypes of immigrants. While right-wing political activists create a shared stereotypical image of immigrants as foes of an imaginary ethnonationalist citizenship, left-wing counter-images construct a more complex and nuanced imagery of citizenship and cultural diversity in Europe. The findings show the challenges of progressive activists’ attempts to translate cosmopolitan images of citizenship across different national and linguistic contexts in contrast to the right wing’s rapid and effective instrumentalizing and translating of denigrating images of minorities in different contexts.

KW - comparison left- and right-wing groups

KW - immigrants’

KW - rights

KW - social movements

KW - transnational mobilization

KW - visuals of immigrants

U2 - 10.1177/1470357217702850

DO - 10.1177/1470357217702850

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85021350930

VL - 16

SP - 315

EP - 336

JO - Visual Communication

JF - Visual Communication

SN - 1470-3572

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 184143860