Introduction
The political successes of the far right have been identified as one of the most significant political shifts of recent decades (Rydgren, 2018; Mudde, 2019; Norris & Inglehart, 2019). At the heart of this transformation is the cultural sector, where institutions such as museums and public libraries have become increasingly politicized and turned into ideological symbols within an intensifying "culture war" (Harding, 2022; Hanell, Carlsson, & Engström, 2023). Recent research shows how librarians face pressure from politicians and the public to cancel LGBTQI-themed or multicultural events. Additionally, hate speech and harassment from far-right sympathizers have led to instances of self-censorship among library professionals (Carlsson, Hanell, & Engström, 2023). This trend poses a significant challenge to the promotion of core democratic principles within the cultural sector, including freedom of speech and the free formation of opinions, thereby threatening democratic governance itself.
Furthermore, authoritarian values and political parties gaining ground raises questions regarding the challenges that this development implies for cultural policy as a political area. Liberal democracy and welfare-state structures still serve as common foundations for the Nordic countries. However, the effectiveness of liberal democratic states in addressing societal challenges is increasingly being called into question, prompting claims of a crisis in liberal democracy (Mounk 2018; Norris & Inglehart 2019). An increasing number of politicians and citizens are engaging in establishment critique, questioning the role of experts and the autonomy of culture from politics. This occurs at the same time as the tone in public discourse, particularly online, is becoming increasingly polarized and heated. This increasing polarization, arguably reinforced by the affordances of digital technology, presents new challenges to cultural institutions, to the field of cultural policy and thereby also to cultural policy research.
This panel seeks to address these issues by critically exploring new ideas, concepts, approaches and methods, that facilitate novel insights into practical as well as scholarly challenges arising from this ongoing political development. Bringing together key researchers, theorists, and practitioners in the field of cultural policy research from three Nordic countries, the panel provides an opportunity for discussion and critical reflection on central questions and the broader impacts of the culture war, along with its associated issues and challenges across the region. Driving questions for this panel include:
•What potential implications does the culture war, along with the rise of authoritarian values and political parties, hold for cultural institutions and cultural policy as a political field?
•How can cultural policy research address questions and challenges raised by this development?
Panel Outline
The panel will start with a brief overview by the moderator introducing the topic of the panel and the challenges it aims to tackle, centering on the culture war, the crisis of liberal democracy, and the rise of authoritarian values and political parties. After the introduction, each panelist will present a lightning talk, focusing on, but not limited to addressing the driving questions. After the lightning talks, the moderator will present a short reflection and summary of the presentations which each panelist will be invited to discuss and respond to. During the final part of the panel, the moderator and panelists will engage the audience with a wider discussion on questions raised by the proclaimed crisis of liberal democracy, the culture war, and the rise of authoritarian values and political parties.
Panelist Perspectives
Hanna Carlsson, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Carlsson will serve as the moderator for the panel as well as 1) introducing the topic through presenting findings from recent research on cultural institutions and the culture war and 2) presenting concluding observations that particularly seek to answer the second driving question.
Lisa Engström, Lund University, Sweden
Since the 1980s, tolerance has increasingly become the response when the rights of minorities are attacked by right-wing radicals. Intolerance is also highlighted as one of the major threats to liberal democracy. In her lightning talk Engström will argue that the dichotomy of tolerance/intolerance as central to the so-called culture war. But is tolerance the answer when right-wing radicals threatens minorities? Tolerance involves a power dynamic where one party, the majority, tolerates while the other, the minority, is tolerated. Tolerance means enduring the undesirable. This also makes the tolerant person virtuous, someone who endures. Thus, tolerance brings boundaries. According to the doxa of today, who should we tolerate? And who are “we” who tolerates?
Fredrik Hanell, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Hanell will present a lightning talk addressing the second driving question, with particular focus on how we can go about studying the interplay between online antagonistic discourse of the far right and on-site attacks on cultural institutions. Previous research has studied these aspects separately, and there is also a significant lack of research that investigates how digital media plays a part in constructing cultural institutions as ideological symbols for the far right. The context of cultural institutions and the online culture war discourse offer a methodologically and empirically compelling starting point for exploring the interrelatedness of on-site experiences and hostile online discourse.
Nanna Kann-Rasmussen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
The culture war reflects the growing polarization in society, placing cultural institutions in a contested and precarious situation. In her talk, Kann-Rasmussen will explore how authoritarian values may thrive on perceptions that these institutions are overly left wing or "woke." Cultural institutions have never been neutral, but when they work at arm’s length from politicians, it is crucial that they maintain public and political trust. For this reason, the cultural war underscores the need to revisit the policies and governance models that define both institutional autonomy and public accountability.
Håkon Larsen, OsloMet, Norway
Larsen will present a lightning talk addressing how the left in Norway is responding to the US imported culture wars, and how this affects how controversies over freedom of speech and the arts play out in the public sphere.
References
Carlsson, H., Hanell, F., Engström, L. (2023). Revisiting the notion of the public library as a meeting place: challenges to the mission of promoting democracy in times of political turmoil. Journal of Documentation. Vol. 79 no. 7. 178-195.
Hanell, F., Carlsson, H., Engström, L. (2023). The public library as a political symbol: a post-political reading of the demise of the consensus-model in Swedish cultural policy. The International Journal of Cultural Policy, 30(7), 899–913.
Harding, T. 2022. “Culture Wars? The (re)politicization of Swedish Cultural Policy.” Cultural Trends 31 (2): 115–132.Mounk, Y. (2018), The People vs. Democracy: Why Our Freedom Is in Danger and How to Save it, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MT.
Mudde, C. (2019). The far right today. Cambridge: Polity PressNorris, P. and Inglehart, R. (2019). Cultural backlash: Trump, Brexit, and authoritarian populism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Rydgren, J. (2018). “The radical right. An introduction.” In Rydgren, Jens (Ed.). The Oxford handbook of the political right. Oxford handbooks online, Oxford University Press, pp. 1-14.