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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
Rising populism, particularly on the Right, involves many people hearkening back to a nostalgic, imagined past. Alongside this has been a resurgence of Christian, Hindu, Jewish, and other forms of religious nationalism. This session examines several relationships and overlaps between populism and religion in the United States, comparatively, and in other nations. Papers analyze the relationship to religious worship attendance, between populism and antisemitism, how it has inspired a 'parallel economy' movement, media forms and ideological dispersion. A common theme forms around how these forms of populism and religion, especially religious nationalism, imagine the past and the future of the ideal nation.
Does Religious Attendance Inoculate Against Right-Wing Populism? - Joseph Charles Roso, Ambrose University
The Relationship between Populism and Antisemitism: New Evidence from Wisconsin - Chad Alan Goldberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Anna Milewski, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Exit for a Homeland: Orthodox Populism, Podcasting Politics, and American Secessionism - Sarah Riccardi-Swartz, Northeastern University; Kamryn Rae Trapane, Northeastern University
The Revolution Will Be Financialized: Right-Populism and the Evolution of the U.S. Parallel Economy Movement, 2021-2025 - Mahesh Somashekhar, University of Illinois-Chicago; Ryan Matsuura Calder, Johns Hopkins University; Ian Kennedy, University of Illinois-Chicago
Transnational Christianity and Right-Populist Mobilization in South Korea: Before and After Martial Law Crisis - Joseph E. Yi, Hanyang University