Publication | Open Access
When Figurative Frames Decrease Political Persuasion: The Case of Right-Wing Anti-Immigration Rhetoric
12
Citations
65
References
2021
Year
XenoracismPublic DebatePolitical AgendaRight-wing Anti-immigration RhetoricPolitical ProcessPublic OpinionRhetoricDiscourse AnalysisRhetorical TheoryPolitical CommunicationPolitical BehaviorPopulismRight-wing Anti-immigration PoliticiansAnti-immigration RhetoricPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesLanguage StudiesPolitical Success
The rhetoric used by right-wing anti-immigration politicians is considered important to their political success. Such rhetoric commonly contains figurative frames with metaphor and/or hyperbole. In two experiments (nexperiment1 = 411, nexperiment2 = 407), we tested when and how such figurative frames add to the intense and emotive character of anti-immigration statements and their subsequent persuasiveness. Results showed that different voters respond differently to figuratively framed anti-immigration rhetoric: overall, voters perceived figuratively framed populist statements as more intense and emotive than nonfigurative statements, which caused boomerang effects by decreasing political persuasion. By contrast, right-wing populist voters were not persuaded by rhetorical variations in anti-immigration statements. Our findings underscore how anti-immigration rhetoric can broaden the gap between voters and put in motion further polarization in our society.
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