Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

Philipp Baum

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Philipp Baum

phone: +49 345 55 24 208

room 106 EG
Reichardtstraße 11
06114 Halle

Signal Messenger: @PhiBaum.10

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postal address:
Philipp Baum
06099 Halle

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Philipp Baum

Main topics

Public Anthropology, Political Anthropology, Ethnography of Protests and Social Movements, Heterodox Knowledge Formations, Populism, (Post-)Liberalism, Changes in Political Culture.

Regional Focus

East Germany

Research Project

Understanding left-wing conservatism: Biographies, motivation and political understanding of supporters of the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance

In his doctoral research, Philipp Baum examines the political biographies and political understanding of the supporters of the party “Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht” (BSW). The still very young party achieved very good results in the state elections in Saxony, Thuringia and Brandenburg, most recently 13.5% in Brandenburg. The BSW fills a gap in the German party landscape. The party appeals to voters who demand a strong welfare state but otherwise conservative policies. Wagenknecht and some of her party colleagues call this line “left-wing conservatism”. Currently (September 2024), however, the demand for “peace with Russia” is at the center of the debates surrounding the BSW. While for many voters it is the decisive factor in their decision to vote, Wagenknecht is accused by many political opponents of spreading Russian propaganda and representing Russian interests.

An ethnographic study of BSW supporter groups will examine the reasons why people become active for the BSW. Initial investigations indicate that many members and supporters of the party were not previously politically active. Why has the time now come for them to become politically active beyond their decision to vote? In addition, the biographical events and personal turning points that led them to opt for the BSW rather than one of the established parties will be examined. One of the questions to be addressed is what role the experience of inequality between East and West Germany might play in this context.

The BSW is establishing itself in the German party landscape within a development that is often understood as “polarization”. Political camps seem to be increasingly irreconcilable towards each other; the understanding that other people have a different political stance to one's own seems to be diminishing. As a result of this development, there is a danger that dialog across political camps will take place less and less frequently and that political opponents will be perceived in an increasingly undifferentiated way. In order to counteract this development, a differentiated ethnography of BSW supporters is intended to question stereotypical ideas about the party.

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