Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/82686
Title: Globalization, demand of sense and enemization of the other : a psychocultural analysis of European societies’ sociopolitical crisis
Authors: Salvatore, Sergio
Avdi, Evrinomi
Battaglia, Fiorella
Cremaschi, Marco
Fini, Viviana
Forges Davanzati, Guglielmo
Kadianaki, Irini
Krasteva, Anna
Kullasepp, Katrin
Matsopoulos, Anastassios
Mølholm, Martin
Redd, Rozlyn
Rochira, Alessia
Russo, Federico
Santarpia, Alfonso
Sammut, Gordon
Valmorbida, Antonella
Veltri, Giuseppe Alessandro
Keywords: Culture -- Europe -- Psychological aspects
Belonging (Social psychology) -- Europe
Social psychology -- Europe
Psychology -- Semiotics
Recessions -- Psychological aspects
Europe -- Economic conditions -- 21st century
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Sage
Citation: Salvatore, S., Mannarini, T., Avdi, E., Battaglia, F., Cremaschi, M., Fini, V.,...Veltri, G. A. (2019). Globalization, demand of sense and enemization of the other: a psychocultural analysis of European societies’ sociopolitical crisis. Culture & Psychology, 25(3), 345-374.
Abstract: The paper outlines a cultural–psychological interpretation of the current European societies’ socio-institutional crisis. To this end, preliminarily, the cultural psychological view of social behaviour is outlined, focusing on the idea that socio-political choices depend on how people make sense of their world. Second, the paper provides an interpretation of the current socio-political European scenario of crisis, based on the main results of a recent study that has mapped the cultural dynamics underpinning some European countries. The interpretation focuses on two complementary facets: on the one hand, the lack of symbolic resources (defined: semiotic capital) enabling people to perceive the collective dimension of life as a lived, subjectively relevant fact of experience; on the other hand, the relevance of a cultural form (defined: paranoid belongingness) that channels a trajectory of sensemaking consisting of the affective connotation of otherness in terms of threat and enemy. Third, the paper deepens the interplay between these cultural dynamics and the social, political and economic conditions that may have been triggered by them. In that perspective, the function of semiotic regulation played by the enemization of the other is highlighted. The conclusive part of the work is devoted to discuss implications the analysis suggests for policy makers.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/82686
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacSoWCri



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