ABSTRACT

The alt-right has been the most important new far-right grouping to appear in decades. Written by researchers from the anti-racist advocacy group HOPE not hate, this book provides a thorough, ground-breaking, and accessible overview of this dangerous new phenomenon. It explains where the alt-right came from, its history so far, what it believes, how it organises and operates, and its future trajectory.

The alt-right is a genuinely transnational movement and this book is unique in offering a truly international perspective, outlining the influence of European ideas and movements as well as the alt-right's development in, and attitude towards, countries as diverse as Japan, India, and Russia. It examines the ideological tributaries that coagulated to form the alt-right, such as white supremacy, the neo-reactionary blogosphere, the European New Right, the anti-feminist manosphere, the libertarian movement, and digital hate culture exemplified by offensive memes and trolling. The authors explore the alt-right's views on gender, sexuality and masculinity, antisemitism and the Holocaust, race and IQ, globalisation and culture as well as its use of violence. The alt-right is a thoroughly modern far-right movement that uses cutting edge technology and this book reveals how they use cryptocurrencies, encryption, hacking, "meme warfare", social media, and the dark web.

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

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|95 pages

Ideas and beliefs

chapter 1|13 pages

The European roots of alt-right ideology

chapter 2|11 pages

A global anti-globalist movement

The Alternative Right, globalisation and “globalism”

chapter 3|10 pages

For whom the bell curves

The alt-right and pseudoscientific racism 1

chapter 6|16 pages

Identitarianism in North America

chapter 7|23 pages

The Dark Enlightenment

Neoreaction and Silicon Valley

part II|56 pages

Culture and activism

chapter 8|16 pages

Art-right

Weaponising culture

chapter 9|16 pages

The role of the troll

Online antagonistic communities and the Alternative Right

chapter 10|14 pages

Alt-tech

Co-opting and creating digital spaces

chapter 11|8 pages

Gaming the algorithms

Exploitation of social media platforms by the Alternative Right

part III|43 pages

Gender and sexuality

chapter 12|18 pages

From anger to ideology

A history of the manosphere

chapter 14|10 pages

Sexuality and the Alternative Right 1

part IV|54 pages

International

chapter 15|11 pages

Japan and the Alternative Right

chapter 16|17 pages

Russia and the Alternative Right

chapter 17|16 pages

Myth, mysticism, India, and the alt-right

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion