ABSTRACT

Discordant Democracy: Noise, Affect, Populism, and the Presidential Campaign paints a portrait of the political experience at a pivotal time in American political and social history. The modern political campaign is aestheticized and assimilated into mass culture, divorced from fact and policy, and nakedly tethered to emotional appeal. Through a multi-modal comparative examination of the sonic and emotional cultures of the 2008 and 2016 campaigns, Justin Patch raises critical queries about our affective relationship to modern politics and the impact of emotional campaigning on democracy. Discordant Democracy asks: how do campaign sounds affect us; what role do we the electorate play in creating and sustaining these sounds and affects; and what actions do they generate? Theories from anthropology, cognitive science, sound studies and philosophy are engaged to grapple with these questions and connect bombastic mass-mediated political events, campaign media and individual sonic experience. The analyses complicate notions of top-down campaigning, political spin, and enthusiastic millennial populism by examining our role in producing and animating political sounds through conversation, applause, laughter, media, and music.

chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction

Listening to the savage heart of the American dream

chapter 2|25 pages

Ethnography

Getting spun as method

chapter 3|24 pages

The campaign as modern magic

chapter 4|13 pages

Prelude

The noise of politics / the politics of noise

chapter 5|21 pages

Sonic democracy*

The noise is the signal

chapter 6|21 pages

The passions of politics

Affect, empathy, and sound

chapter 7|22 pages

The populist sensorium

The politics of sounding and the performance of listening

chapter 8|21 pages

Our politics

Deafened and dumbstruck

chapter 9|5 pages

Conclusion

In defense of noise