Keywords

Demagoguery, Donald Trump, grotesque, Hugo Chavez, Silvio Berlusconi

Abstract

This essay argues that the successful political careers of certain populist leaders rhetorically enact what scholars have long recognized in art, literature, and entertainment as the grotesque. The grotesque provides a theoretically rich means for describing the vulgar and chaotic public behaviors that take strong hold among anti-elite audiences at certain points in history. By closely reading comments from political leaders cast in the grotesque mold, including Silvio Berlusconi, Hugo Chavez, and Donald Trump, this essay explains not only what the grotesque is, but also when and how it is likely to find traction in a political culture ripe for change. The essay concludes that while the grotesque may be ideologically neutral, it shows an unsettling complaisance to twenty-first-century demagoguery and may be a defining mode for our time.

Original Publication Citation

Crosby, Richard Benjamin. “On the Rhetorical Grotesque: A Mode for Strange Times.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 50.2 (2020): 109 – 123.

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2020

Publisher

Rhetoric Society Quarterly

Language

English

College

Humanities

Department

English

University Standing at Time of Publication

Associate Professor

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