본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기
국회도서관 홈으로 정보검색 소장정보 검색

목차보기


Introduction
Prelude
Preface
Method
Digitalization, Social Media, and the Internet
Concepts – The Essential Ones
Radical Conservatism and Conservative Revolution
The Radical Right
The Revolutionary Right
The New Right
Books on Identitarianism
1 Identitarianism, Identitarians, Identitarian Operations, Movements, Parties, Persons
The Alt-Right, United States
Europe: Sweden
Nordiska Förlaget, Nordiska Förbundet
Daniel Friberg
How Do You Describe Your Own Political Affiliation?
What Is the Most Important Political Issue?
Why Did You Choose to Move to Hungary?
John Morgan
Some Swedish Identitarian Intellectuals
Oskorei/Joakim Andersen
Anton Stigermark
The Golden One: Marcus Follin
Christoffer Dulny
The Sweden Democrats and Identitarianism
The Identitarians in SDU
Stockholm in May 2017: A Press Release and a Conference
2 Inspiration and Sources
GRECE and “The New Right”
Alain de Benoist
Guillaume Faye
Tomislav Sunic
Against “1968”
Gerd Bergfleth
Karlheinz Weißmann
Götz Kubitschek
Manuel Ochsenreiter
Pierre Krebs and Jean Mabire
Some Themes of the New Right
The Necessary Enemy
The Critique of “Hyper-Reflexivity”
Anti-Americanism
Empire and Eurasianism
Francis Parker Yockey
Aleksandr Dugin
Conversation with Dugin on August 16, 2017
Jean-François Thiriart
Traditionalism and Esotericism
Julius Evola
The “Conservative Revolution”
“The Ideas of 1914”
Ernst Jünger
Georges Sorel
3 Core Ideas of Identitarianism
Anti-Semitism/Jew Hatred
Islamophobia and Hatred of Muslims
Conspiracism
Freud and Schreber
A Part of Everyday Life
Conspiracies and Conspiracy Theorists
Conspiracy Theories
Conspiracism in the United States
Conspiracism, Apocalypse, Paranoia
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
Secret Societies
The Knights Templar
Rosicrucians
The Freemasons
Some Newer Conspiracy Theories
The Turner Diaries
American Militia Groups and Conspiracy Theories
Various Conspiracy Theories
David Icke
Peter Mangs
Eurabia
The “Truth Movement”
Perspectives and Explanations
Occidentalism
Benevolence, Surveillance, and Paranoia
Muslim Mass Immigration as a Jewish Conspiracy
4 Excursus: Esoteric Symbolism: Mircea Eliade, Carl Schmitt, Ernst Jünger, Armin Mohler, and Julius Evola
The Problem
Background
Esotericism
Eliade and His Friends
Ernst Jünger and Carl Schmitt
The Legion and the Iron Guard
René Guénon and Traditionalism
Julius Evola
The Nazi Occultists
Some Others on Symbolism
Jakob Wilhelm Hauer
Eliade’s Symbolism: The Fall, the Terror of History, and Reintegration
Images and Symbols
The Eranos Circle
The Journal Antaios
Symbolism Today? Some Sociological Speculations
Re-Radicalization?
The Imaginary and the Symbolic: A Lacanian Approach
Postscript 2022
5 A Sociological Explanation
The Generational Factor
Class, Status, Gender
Political, Epistemic, and Economic Cycles
Demographics and Competition
The Right Opportunity
Creative Destruction
Conspiracism
Anti-Feminism
Theoretical Explanations
Conclusion
Differences
Bibliography
Index
Name Index
Subject Index

이용현황보기

The nature of identitarianism 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
등록번호 청구기호 권별정보 자료실 이용여부
0003055577 320.5094 -A24-1 서울관 사회과학자료실(208호) 이용가능

출판사 책소개

알라딘제공

The Nature of Identitarianism explores the background to this new far right movement.

Since its origins in France in 2003, Identitarianism has become one of the most influential far-right ideologies. Inspiring groups such as Generation Identity in Europe and the Alt-Right in America, Identitarianism has spawned a far-right constellation that includes white nationalist direct action groups, think tanks, "alternative media" organizations and social media "celebrities". But the ideas that underpin Identitarianism are often poorly understood. This book examines the movement’s antecedents and intellectual lineage in the thinkers of the Conservative Revolution and the European New Right, as well as the influence of far-right gurus such as Francis Parker Yockey, Jean Thiriart, Julius Evola, and Aleksandr Dugin. The author also investigates how conspiracy thinking, antisemitism, and islamophobia feature prominently in the identitarian worldview.

This book will be essential reading for scholars and activists alike with an interest in race relations, fascism, extremism, and social movements.



The Nature of Identitarianism explores the background to this new far right movement. This book examines the movement’s antecedents and intellectual lineage in the thinkers of the Conservative Revolution and the European New Right, as well as the influence of far-right gurus.