9 “It’s a white fight and we’ve got to win it”
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Kyle Burke
Abstract
Kyle Burke examines the origins and evolution of a varied yet coherent movement of white supremacist, neo-Nazi, and skinhead groups in the United States and Britain. Since 1980 they have worked across national borders, trafficking in shared ideas, interests, and industries. Making the case that white people in the United States and Britain inherited a common ethnic, cultural, and religious past—and therefore faced common challenges at the end of the twentieth century—they circulated texts, populated internet chat rooms and message boards, and planned international gatherings. Advocating violence against their perceived enemies at home and abroad, they denounced immigrants and non-whites as inferior and unassimilable and ranted about Jewish conspiracies for world domination. As this movement coalesced, the British National Front and United States’ National Alliance enlisted its members as shock troops, hoping to tap the well-spring of white rage against the emerging post-Cold War order. But they struggled to control the movement and channel its violence for their own ends. Even so, by the mid-1990s this movement had radiated into continental Europe, the former Soviet Union, and parts of Latin America, drawing more adherents but also more scrutiny from governments.
Abstract
Kyle Burke examines the origins and evolution of a varied yet coherent movement of white supremacist, neo-Nazi, and skinhead groups in the United States and Britain. Since 1980 they have worked across national borders, trafficking in shared ideas, interests, and industries. Making the case that white people in the United States and Britain inherited a common ethnic, cultural, and religious past—and therefore faced common challenges at the end of the twentieth century—they circulated texts, populated internet chat rooms and message boards, and planned international gatherings. Advocating violence against their perceived enemies at home and abroad, they denounced immigrants and non-whites as inferior and unassimilable and ranted about Jewish conspiracies for world domination. As this movement coalesced, the British National Front and United States’ National Alliance enlisted its members as shock troops, hoping to tap the well-spring of white rage against the emerging post-Cold War order. But they struggled to control the movement and channel its violence for their own ends. Even so, by the mid-1990s this movement had radiated into continental Europe, the former Soviet Union, and parts of Latin America, drawing more adherents but also more scrutiny from governments.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front matter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Contributors ix
- Series editors’ foreword xii
- Preface xiv
- Introduction 1
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In the shadow of slavery and empire
- 1 Black pasts, white nationalist racecraft, and the political work of history 31
- 2 “Regular White man” 53
- 3 Wild power 71
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Opposing civil rights
- 4 Enoch Powell’s America / America’s Enoch Powell 105
- 5 From Belfast to Bob Jones 131
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Nostalgia for white rule
- 6 “One last retreat” 157
- 7 Transatlantic white supremacy 187
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The far right in the Anglosphere
- 8 White Australia alone? 231
- 9 “It’s a white fight and we’ve got to win it” 262
- Postscript 301
- Index 309
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front matter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Contributors ix
- Series editors’ foreword xii
- Preface xiv
- Introduction 1
-
In the shadow of slavery and empire
- 1 Black pasts, white nationalist racecraft, and the political work of history 31
- 2 “Regular White man” 53
- 3 Wild power 71
-
Opposing civil rights
- 4 Enoch Powell’s America / America’s Enoch Powell 105
- 5 From Belfast to Bob Jones 131
-
Nostalgia for white rule
- 6 “One last retreat” 157
- 7 Transatlantic white supremacy 187
-
The far right in the Anglosphere
- 8 White Australia alone? 231
- 9 “It’s a white fight and we’ve got to win it” 262
- Postscript 301
- Index 309