3 The National Socialist Movement of the United States and the turn to environmentalism
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        Daniel Jones
        
Abstract
One of the largest North American neo-Nazi groups, the National Socialist Movement, became a prominent feature of protests especially around the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. Through a multimodal analysis of its visual propaganda and supporting texts, this chapter explores how a key anti-democratic extreme-right actor within the United States far right has circulated traditional fascist and National Socialist tropes via the language of environmentalism. The chapter explores how the traditional Nazi understanding of the linkages between people and place, known as Blut und Boden (Blood and Soil) meant that environmentalist language and concern of the landscape could be used to transmit complex ideas to those within and without the movement. It also examines how appeals to a greater environmental good, and threat to the environment, are utilised in ecofascist rhetoric. This includes consideration of how visual communication around the environment helped create a sacred space, and how this helped develop the sense of a cultic milieu. It also shows how ‘eco-activism’, custodianship of ‘the land’ (and its border) and outdoorsmanship were used to create a welcoming environmental space that the movement staked a claim to, and which it used to try and draw people deeper into the milieu.
Abstract
One of the largest North American neo-Nazi groups, the National Socialist Movement, became a prominent feature of protests especially around the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. Through a multimodal analysis of its visual propaganda and supporting texts, this chapter explores how a key anti-democratic extreme-right actor within the United States far right has circulated traditional fascist and National Socialist tropes via the language of environmentalism. The chapter explores how the traditional Nazi understanding of the linkages between people and place, known as Blut und Boden (Blood and Soil) meant that environmentalist language and concern of the landscape could be used to transmit complex ideas to those within and without the movement. It also examines how appeals to a greater environmental good, and threat to the environment, are utilised in ecofascist rhetoric. This includes consideration of how visual communication around the environment helped create a sacred space, and how this helped develop the sense of a cultic milieu. It also shows how ‘eco-activism’, custodianship of ‘the land’ (and its border) and outdoorsmanship were used to create a welcoming environmental space that the movement staked a claim to, and which it used to try and draw people deeper into the milieu.
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Tables x
- Contributors xi
- Acknowledgements xv
- Studying the far right’s natural environments 1
- 1 Right as rain 24
- 2 The exclusivist claims of Pacific ecofascists 43
- 3 The National Socialist Movement of the United States and the turn to environmentalism 63
- 4 The environmental semiotics of Spanish far-right populism 83
- 5 Purity and control 104
- 6 The new Russian civilisation 125
- 7 Not so green after all 146
- 8 From metapolitics to electoral communication 166
- 9 The murky world of ideologies 186
- 10 Homeland, cows and climate change 206
- 11 Double vision 229
- 12 Talking heads and contrarian graphs 253
- 13 The (paranoid) style of American climate politics 274
- Looking back, looking forward 294
- Index 302
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Tables x
- Contributors xi
- Acknowledgements xv
- Studying the far right’s natural environments 1
- 1 Right as rain 24
- 2 The exclusivist claims of Pacific ecofascists 43
- 3 The National Socialist Movement of the United States and the turn to environmentalism 63
- 4 The environmental semiotics of Spanish far-right populism 83
- 5 Purity and control 104
- 6 The new Russian civilisation 125
- 7 Not so green after all 146
- 8 From metapolitics to electoral communication 166
- 9 The murky world of ideologies 186
- 10 Homeland, cows and climate change 206
- 11 Double vision 229
- 12 Talking heads and contrarian graphs 253
- 13 The (paranoid) style of American climate politics 274
- Looking back, looking forward 294
- Index 302