ABSTRACT

This book focuses primarily on continuities and discontinuities of fascist politics as manifested in discourses of post-war European countries. Many traumatic pasts in Europe are linked to the experience of fascist and national-socialist regimes in the 20th century and to related colonial and imperialist expansionist politics. And yet we are again confronted with the emergence, rise and success of extreme right wing political movements, across Europe and beyond, which frequently draw on fascist and national-socialist ideologies, themes, idioms, arguments and lexical items. Post-war taboos have forced such parties, politicians and their electorate to frequently code their exclusionary fascist rhetoric.

This collection shows that an interdisciplinary critical approach to fascist text and talk—subsuming all instances of meaning-making (oral, visual, written, sounds, etc.) and genres such as policy documents, speeches, school books, media reporting, posters, songs, logos and other symbols—is necessary to deconstruct exclusionary meanings and to confront their inegalitarian political projects.

chapter 2|25 pages

Radical Right Discourse Contra State-Based Authoritarian Populism

Neoliberalism, Identity and Exclusion after the Crisis

chapter 3|14 pages

Italian Postwar Neo-Fascism

Three Paths, One Mission?

chapter 7|24 pages

Education and Etiquette

Behaviour Formation in Fascist Spain

chapter 8|17 pages

The CDS-PP and the Portuguese Parliament's Annual Celebration of the 1974 Revolution

Ambivalence and Avoidance in the Construction of the Fascist Past

chapter 10|22 pages

Racial Populism in British Fascist Discourse

The Case of COMBAT and the British National Party (1960–1967)

chapter 11|25 pages

Variations on a Theme

The Jewish ‘Other' in Old and New Antisemitic Media Discourses in Hungary in the 1940s and in 2011

chapter 12|28 pages

The Return of the Ukrainian Far Right

The Case of VO Svoboda

chapter 15|18 pages

The Branding of European Nationalism

Perpetuation and Novelty in Racist Symbolism