The post-war Anglo-American far right

edited by Paul Jackson (University of Northampton, UK) and Anton Shekhovtsov (Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen, Austria)
9781137396198
1-137-39619-9

Following the marginalization of extreme right wing cultures after the Second World War, activists have sought new ways to develop communities of extremism. In part building on transnational elements of.

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extreme right activity before 1945, post-war far right extremists have reconfigured their culture in a variety of ways. The essays in this volume examine how a process of 'accumulative extremism' has developed over time between primarily British and American activists, leading to a new 'tradition' of far right activity that has impacted more widely on the global extreme right scene too. Essays from leading experts cover a wide variety of themes, which include: the roles played by high profile intellectuals and activists, from the modernist poet Ezra Pound to the extreme neo-Nazi figure Colin Jordan; the impact of the Ku Klux Klan in Europe; the role of Enoch Powell in America; the influence of the American discourse of 'Cultural Marxism' on Anders Breivik and European Islamophobia; the international networks developed by the National Socialist Underground; and analysis of the Tea Party movement. Concluding the book is a short essay pointing the way to future research in the field of transnational fascism studies.