Discursive Regimes of Democratic Decline

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affective polarization
amnesty
Category=GTC
Category=JPF
Category=JPHV
communication
decline
discursive amnesia
electoral phenomenon
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethics
ethnonationaism
forthcoming
global communication
hegemonic discourse
history
identity
media power
morals
narrative
nationalism
oppression
political mobilization
power
processes
religion
resistance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666944549
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This edited collection brings together esteemed international scholars to examine how religio-ethnonationalist power is produced, normalized, and resisted through discourse.

Rather than treating democratic decline as a purely institutional or electoral phenomenon, the book foregrounds communicative processes through which exclusionary identities, historical narratives, moral claims, and affective appeals are mobilized to legitimate authoritarian power. As the first book in communication studies to systematically theorize religio-ethnonationalism as a central analytic framework, Democratic Decline advances understanding of how religion, nationalism, and media power intersect in struggles over democracy. Contributors from Ghana, Great Britain, India, Iran, Malaysia, Nigeria, North Macedonia, and the U.S. analyze how discourse functions simultaneously as a mechanism of domination and a site of contestation, shaping memory, identity, citizenship, and political belonging through processes of discursive amnesia, discursive amnesty, discursive cleansing, and discursive resistance.

The book engages a wide range of interdisciplinary conversations, including peace, war, and conflict resolution, legal and policy analysis, colonial and post-colonial inquiry, ethnic and minority rights, post-structuralist discourse theory, civil society, and environmental injustice. Across these intersecting domains, contributors demonstrate how religio-ethnonationalist projects rely on structured forgetting, moralized narratives, and affective polarization to sustain hierarchies of power and exclusion, while also revealing uneven conditions under which resistance emerges.

By centering communication as a site of democratic struggle, Democratic Decline offers readers conceptual tools for identifying how democratic backsliding is communicatively produced and challenged, while foregrounding the ethical and political stakes of memory, identity, power, and resistance in shaping the future of democracy.

Lara Martin Lengel is Professor in the School of Communication Studies at Bowling Green State University, USA.

Victoria A. Newsom is Professor of Communication Studies and affiliate faculty in Diversity and Social Justice at Olympic College, USA.

Desiree A. Montenegro is a faculty member at Palo Verde College, and affiliate faculty with the California Department of Corrections and several universities and colleges in greater Los Angeles, USA.