ABSTRACT

White supremacist groups are highly secretive, so their public propaganda tells us little about their operations or the people they attract. To understand the world of organized racism it is necessary to study it from the inside by talking to their members and observing their groups. Doing so reveals a disturbing picture of how fairly ordinary white people learn to embrace the vicious ideas and dangerous agendas of white supremacism.

This book takes the reader inside organized racism, revealing the kind of women and men who join groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan or neo-Nazi skinheads, and what they do in those groups. The volume collects significant published works from renowned scholar Kathleen M. Blee's work on racist activism, alongside new essays on the theories, methods, and approaches of studying racist activism. Discussing topics such as emotional issues in research, the place of violence and hate in white supremacism, and how women are involved in racial terrorism, Blee makes use of a range of sources, including oral histories, ethnographic observations, and interviews, to shape her findings.

Written by the pioneer and leading scholar of women in racist activism, this volume is essential reading for students, scholars, and general readers interested in the areas of social movements, politics, race studies, and American history.

chapter |7 pages

Studying racist activism

Methods and lessons

section I|29 pages

Fear, stigma, and other consequences of studying racists

chapter 1|8 pages

Studying The Enemy

chapter 2|2 pages

Why I returned to studying the far-right

chapter 3|15 pages

White-knuckle research

Emotional dynamics in fieldwork with racist activists1

section II|20 pages

Methods of studying racist activism

chapter 4|13 pages

White on white

Interviewing women in United States white supremacist groups

chapter 5|3 pages

The banality of violence

section III|44 pages

Theoretical lens and templates

section IV|58 pages

Entering and leaving white supremacism

chapter 9|18 pages

Women in the 1920s Ku Klux Klan MOVEMENT

chapter 10|21 pages

Becoming a racist

Women in contemporary Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazi groups

chapter 11|15 pages

Personal effects from far-right activism

section V|52 pages

Directions for future research

chapter 13|17 pages

Women in extreme right parties and movements

A comparison of the Netherlands and the United States (co-authored with Annette Linden)

chapter 14|16 pages

The duality of spectacle and secrecy

A case study of fraternalism in the 1920s U.S. Ku Klux Klan (co-authored with Amy McDowell)