Portraitfoto Jan Schulze Buschoff

Jan Schulze Buschoff

New party line and the attempt to assume power: How Marine Le Pen transforms the Rassemblement national from a fringe group to a people’s party

Until 2018 the French right-wing extremist party National Rally did business under the name of National Front. Since its change of leadership in 2011, the party transformed to a middle-class image. Despite its effort to „dedemonise“ itself from right-wing extremist prejudices, the party remains within a right-wing extremist structure. This raises the question how this party is able to defend democratic-republican values not only by tolerating its right-wing extremist disposition, but by promoting it. This contradiction between seemingly democratic actions and nationalistic thinking requires an accurate investigation of the National Rally. The aim of my project is to determine what communicative strategies the party uses to get rid of its right-wing extremist image. Therefore, I work with the Hegemonic Theory from Laclau and Mouffe to use it within a discourse analysis so as to expose the approach of the NR.

Research Interests
  • Radical Democratic Theory
  • Discourse Analysis
  • Populism
  • Extremism
  • Totalitarism
  • Nationalism
Vita
  • Since 2019
    PhD candidate, University of Bremen
  • 2016
    M. A. International Relations, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
  • 2014 – 2015
    Rennes Institute of Political Studies
  • 2013
    B. A. Romance Philology and Historical Science, University of Bremen
Talks, Workshops and Events
  • 2021
    Conference Settings of Communication Studies: Germany and France.
  • 2021
    Conference Journalism and Populism.
decolonial scholarship

“Creating decentralizing and decolonizing scholarship on contradiction, contradictory phenomena, and contradicting processes is a challenging task.”

Kerstin Knopf
paradox

“The basis of law is not an idea as a systematic unified principle but a paradox.”

Andreas Fischer-Lescano
ideal of a contradiction-free world

“Science has long been animated by the ideal of a contradiction-free world in which logical orders could merge with society, politics, culture and language. In the GRC Contradiction Studies we are working on ways of describing the multiplicity and complexity, the danger and beauty of our worlds that clearly go beyond concepts of freedom from contradiction.”

Michi Knecht
interstice

“The contradiction of law in Derrida lies in the interstice that separates the impossibility of deconstructing justice from the possibility of deconstructing law.”

Andreas Fischer-Lescano
articulate

“Contradictions need to be articulated in order to exist.”

Martin Nonhoff