ABSTRACT

The Ideology of Political Reactionaries offers a new perspective on the beliefs reactionaries share, presenting a theory of reactionary ideology in the process. Rather than taking self-contradictions in the reactionary imagination as a reason for diminishment, complexity is taken as a challenge.

The book argues that the features that unite reactionaries lie in rhetoric. Reactionaries make three persuasive appeals: to decadence, conspiracy, and indignation. They also display some recurrent styles. The book’s rhetorical approach entails a critique of the alternative approaches to reactionary politics (dubbed as ‘dispositional’, ‘sociological’, and ‘conceptual’). At the heart of the book is the textual analysis of the writings of a range of figures who are chosen in deliberate diversity and who have interacted with political audiences in different eras and settings: Edmund Burke, Joseph de Maistre, Sarah Palin, Donald Trump, Adolf Hitler, Éric Zemmour, Joe McCarthy, Anders Breivik, and Nigel Farage. Analysis of their writings helps the book to reckon with some particular puzzles of ideologies and rhetoric. These puzzles include the proximity of reactionaries to conservatism, the ambiguity of their nostalgia, the myth of their essential charisma, and the apparent fetishisation of facts.

The Ideology of Political Reactionaries ought to interest anyone concerned about current ideological trends and, in particular, students and scholars of politics and history.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

Reactionaries from Dispositions to Rhetoric

part I|79 pages

Indignation

chapter 1|39 pages

Edmund Burke and Joseph de Maistre

chapter 2|38 pages

Sarah Palin and Donald Trump

part II|56 pages

Decadence

chapter 3|27 pages

Adolf Hitler and Nazism

part III|97 pages

Conspiracy

chapter 5|29 pages

Senator Joe McCarthy

chapter 6|25 pages

Anders Breivik

chapter 7|29 pages

Nigel Farage

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

Reactionaries from Appeals to Styles