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    Key Thinkers of the Radical Right


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      i

      Key Thinkers of the Radical Right

      ii

      i

      Key Thinkers of the

      Radical Right

      Behind the New Threat to Liberal

      Democracy

      Edited by

      MARK SEDGWICK

      1

      iv

      3

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      9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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      v

      Contents

      Contributors

      vii

      Introduction— mark sedgwick

      xiii

      PART I: Classic Thinkers

      1. Oswald Spengler and the Decline of the West— david engels

      3

      2. Ernst Jünger and Storms of Steel— elliot y. neaman

      22

      3. Carl Schmitt and the Politics of Identity— reinhard mehring

      36

      4. Julius Evola and Tradition— h. thomas hakl

      54

      PART II: Modern Thinkers

      5. Alain de Benoist and the New Right— jean- yves camus

      73

      6. Guillaume Faye and Archeofuturism— stéphane françois

      91

      7. Paul Gottfried and Paleoconservatism— seth bartee

      102

      8. Patrick J. Buchanan and the Death of the West— edward ashbee 121

      9. Jared Taylor and White Identity— russell nieli

      137

      vi

      vi

      Contents

      10. Alexander Dugin and Eurasianism— marlene laruelle

      155

      11. Bat Ye’or and Eurabia— sindre bangstad

      170

      PART III: Emergent Thinkers

      12. Mencius Moldbug and Neoreaction— joshua tait

      187

      13. Greg Johnson and Counter- Currents— graham macklin

      204

      14. Richard B. Spencer and the Alt Right— tamir bar- on

      224

      15. Jack Donovan and Male Tribalism— matthew n. lyons

      242

      16. Daniel Friberg and Metapolitics in

      Action— benjamin teitelbaum

      259

      Select Bibliographies

      277

      Index

      293

      vi

      Contributors

      Edward Ashbee is director of the International Business and Politics BSc

      and MSc programs at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. He has

      had articles published in journals such as Political Quarterly, Parliamentary

      Affairs, Global Discourse, Society, Journal of Political Power, and Journal of

      American Studies. His recent work includes The Right and the Recession

      (2015) and The Trump Revolt (2017). He also coedited The Obama Presidency

      and the Politics of Change (2017).

      Sindre Bangstad is a Norwegian social anthropologist with a background

      in ethnographic studies of Muslims in South Africa and Norway, and a

      researcher at KIFO (the Institute for Church, Religion, and Worldview

      Research) in Oslo. Bangstad, who has published extensively on secularism,

      racism, Islamophobia, right- wing extremism, hate speech, and right- wing

      populism in Norway, holds a cand. polit. degree from the University of

      Bergen in Norway and a PhD from Radboud University in Nijmegen in the

      Netherlands. He is a columnist at Anthropology News and has published in

      popular outlets such as Boston Review, The Guardian (UK), Open Democracy,

      the SSRC’s The Immanent Frame, and in leading anthropological journals

      such as American Ethnologist, American Anthropologist, Anthropological

      Theory, Anthropology Today, and Social Anthropology. Among his books are

      Anders Breivik and the Rise of Islamophobia (2014), The Politics of Mediated

      Presence: Exploring the Voices of Muslims in Norway’s Contemporary Mediated

      Public Spheres (2015), and Anthropology of Our Times: An Edited Volume in

      Public Anthropology (2017).

      Tamir Bar- On received his PhD from McGill University. He is a

      professor- researcher in the School of Social Sciences and Government,

      Tec de Monterrey (Mexico). A member of Mexico’s National System for

      Researchers since 2015, Bar- On is the author of Where Have All The

      Fascists Gone? (2007 ), Rethinking the French New Right: Alternatives to

      vi

      viii

      Contributors

      Modernity (2013), The World through Soccer: The Cultural Impact of a Global

      Sport (2014), and Beyond Soccer: International Relations and Politics as Seen

      through the Beautiful Game (2017).

      Seth Bartee is an Assistant Professor of History at Guilford Technical

      Community College in Jamestown, North Carolina. Currently, Prof. Bartee

      is serving as a New City Fellow in Raleigh, North Carolina and a Visiting

      Scholar at The Kirk Center in Mecosta, Michigan. Bartee is an intellectual

      historian and an active member of The Society for US Intellectual History.

      Jean- Yves Camus is director of the Observatoire des radicalités politiques

      (ORAP) at the Jean Jaurès Foundation (Paris) and a Research Fellow at

      the Institut de relations internationales et stratégiques (IRIS). His last

      book (with Nicolas Lebourg), Far Right Politics in Europe, was published by

      Harvard University Press in 2017. He has also written extensively on the

      European New Right and the links between Russia and the European Far

      Right. On those topics, he contributed to Marlene Laruelle’s Eurasianism

      and the European Far Right: Reshaping the Europe- Russia Relationship (2015)

      and to Les Faux- semblants du Front national: Sociologie d’un parti politique

      (2015), edited by Sylvain Crépon, Alexandre Dézé, and Nonna Mayer.

      David Engels is professor of Roman history at the Université libre de

      Bruxelles, Belgium. He has published numerous articles and books on

      Roman Rel
    igion, Hellenistic Statecraft, the Reception of Antiquity, and

      the Philosophy of History. Among his best- known works is Le déclin: La

      crise de l’Union européenne et la chute de la République romaine: Analogies

      historiques (2013), translated since then into numerous languages. He also

      edited a survey of cyclical theories in the Philosophy of History titled Von

      Platon bis Fukuyama (2015).

      Stéphane François has a PhD in political science and is an associated

      member of Groupe Sociétés Religions Laïcités (CNRS/ Ecole Pratique

      des hautes Etudes). He is a specialist on the French extreme Right. His

      most recent books include Histoire de la haine identitaire: Mutations et

      diffusions de l’altérophobie (with Nicolas Lebourg, 2016), L’Extrême droite

      et l’ésotérisme: Retour sur un couple toxique (2016), Le Retour de Pan:.

      Panthéisme, néo-

      paganisme et antichristianisme dans l’écologie radicale

      (2016), Les Mystères du nazisme:. Aux sources d’un fantasme contemporain

      (2015), and Au- delà des vents du Nord: L’extrême droite française, le Pôle nord

      et les Indo- Européens (2014).

      ix

      Contributors

      ix

      Hans Thomas Hakl is the founder of Gnostika, a German academic- esoteric

      magazine where he serves as coeditor. He has edited works by Julius

      Evola, Eliphas Lévi, Gérard Encausse (“Papus”), Maria De Naglowska,

      Hans Freimark, and others. He is a contributor to the Dictionary of Gnosis

      and Western Esotericism (2003) and to the new edition of the Encyclopedia of

      Religions (2005). His main work, Eranos: An Alternative Intellectual History

      of the Twentieth Century, was published by McGill- Queen’s University

      Press in 2013. Hakl has translated four books of Evola into German and

      written more than thirty articles (including introductions, reviews, and

      dictionary entries) on various aspects of Evola in German, Italian, English,

      and French. Hakl met Evola shortly before his death.

      Marlene Laruelle is an associate director and research professor at the

      Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies (IERES), Elliott

      School of International Affairs, The George Washington University.

      Laruelle is also a codirector of PONARS (Program on New Approaches to

      Research and Security in Eurasia), director of the Central Asia Program

      at IERES and a researcher at EUCAM (Europe- Central Asia Monitoring),

      Brussels. Laruelle received her PhD in history at the National Institute of

      Oriental Languages and Cultures (INALCO) and her postdoctoral degree

      in political science at Sciences- Po in Paris.

      Matthew Lyons has been writing about right- wing politics for more

      than twenty- five years. His work focuses on the interplay between social

      movements and systems of oppression. He is coauthor with Chip Berlet

      of Right- Wing Populism in America (2000) and lead author of Ctrl- Alt-

      Delete: An Antifascist Report on the Alternative Right (2017). His essays have

      appeared in many periodicals and on the radical antifascist blog Three

      Way Fight.

      Graham Macklin is an Assistant Professor/ Postdoctoral Fellow at the

      Center for Research on Extremism (C- Rex) in Oslo, Norway, and an

      Honorary Fellow, Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/ Non- Jewish

      Relations, Southampton University, United Kingdom. He has published

      widely about extreme right- wing politics in Britain in both the interwar and

      postwar period including “Very Deeply Dyed in Black”: Oswald Mosley and

      the Resurrection of British fascism after 1945 (2007). His forthcoming mon-

      ograph White Racial Nationalism in Britain in Britain will be published

      by Routledge in 2019 as will two coedited collections, Transnational

      x

      x

      Contributors

      Extreme Right- wing Networks and Researching the Far Right: Theory, Method

      and Practice. His research has been funded by local and national govern-

      ment as well as the European Union (H2020). He is also coeditor of the

      Routledge Studies in Fascism and the Far Right book series.

      Reinhard Mehring is professor of political science at the University

      of Education Heidelberg. He has a PhD in political science from the

      University of Freiburg and a Habilitation from the Humboldt University of

      Berlin. His books include Carl Schmitt zur Einführung (1992, 5th ed. 2017),

      Carl Schmitt: Aufstieg und Fall: Eine Biographie (2009, translated as Carl

      Schmitt: A Biography, 2014), Kriegstechniker des Begriffs: Biographische Studien

      zu Carl Schmitt (2014), and Carl Schmitt: Denker im Widerstreit: Werk–

      Wirkung– Aktualität (2017).

      Elliot Neaman is professor of modern European intellectual history

      at the University of San Francisco, where he has taught since 1993. He

      specializes in European political thought, ideology, and theory. His first

      book, A Dubious Past: The Politics of Literature after Nazism (1999), was

      on the writer Ernst Jünger. His latest book features the West German

      student movement, Free Radicals (1999). Neaman has also written exten-

      sively about other major European thinkers, including Martin Heidegger,

      Carl Schmitt, Georges Sorel, and Jacques Derrida. He also publishes in

      European newspapers on contemporary issues, particularly geopolitics

      and economics. His current research project focuses on espionage in the

      Federal Republic. Neaman teaches courses in intellectual history, modern

      German history, world history after 1945, and in the USF Honors Program.

      Russell Nieli received his PhD from Princeton University where he spe-

      cialized in political philosophy and the interface between religion and pol-

      itics. He is a lecturer in Princeton University’s Politics Department, and

      is a senior preceptor in Princeton’s James Madison Program in American

      Ideals and Institutions. Nieli is the author of Wittgenstein: From Mysticism

      to Ordinary Language, and in recent years has written extensively on race

      relations in the United States, which he approaches from the perspective

      of classical liberalism and what he calls “theocentric humanism.” In his

      book Wounds That Will Not Heal (2012), he takes up the continuing con-

      troversy over racial preference policies in the United States with a spe-

      cial focus on American universities. He is currently working on a book

      that explains the forces that can hold America together despite its vast

      xi

      Contributors

      xi

      demographic diversity in terms of race, ethnicity, religion, and collective

      achievement.

      Mark Sedgwick was born in England and studied history at Oxford

      University before emigrating to Egypt. He did a PhD at the University

      of Bergen in Norway, taught history at the American University in Cairo,

      and then moved to Denmark to teach in the Department of the Study of

      Religion at Aarhus University. He was secretary of the European Society

      of the Study of Western Esotericism, and first became aware of the

      connections between esotericism and radical politics while working on

      his PhD.

      Joshua Tait is a doctoral candidate in history at the University of North

      Carolina. His dissertation explores
    the intellectual origins of conserva-

      tism and right- wing engagement with the “American Political Tradition.”

      Originally from New Zealand, he lives in Chapel Hill, NC.

      Benjamin R. Teitelbaum is assistant professor of ethnomusicology

      and affiliate in International Affairs at the University of Colorado. His

      commentary on Western ultraconservatism, culture, and politics has

      appeared in Foreign Policy, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal

      as well as on Swedish Radio, and his academic essays have appear

      in Ethnomusicology, Patterns of Prejudice, Scandinavian Studies, Arkiv,

      and Current Anthropology. His first book, Lions of the North: Sounds of

      the New Nordic Radical Nationalism, was published in 2017 by Oxford

      University Press.

      xi

      xi

      Introduction

      Mark Sedgwick

      T H E R A D I C A L R I G H T was once generally imagined in terms of skinheads,

      tattoo parlors, and hooligans. While all of these do play a role, there is

      much more to the contemporary radical Right than this. There is also an

      intellectual radical Right, little known to most, but increasingly important.

      The central purpose of Key Thinkers of the Radical Right: Behind the New

      Threat to Liberal Democracy is to explore it.

      The existence of an intellectual radical Right is not a new phenom-

      enon. Many prominent thinkers from the French Revolution to the Second

      World War could be put in this category. The horrors of the war and of the

      Nazi camps, however, contributed to a general reaction against the radical

      Right that led to its disappearance from mainstream politics and to its

      eclipse in intellectual life. For many decades, a new liberal orthodoxy ruled

      across the West, apparently unchallenged.

      Since the start of the twenty- first century, the mainstream has been

      shifting. In Europe, “populist” political parties have pulled the mainstream

      in their direction, and the liberal orthodoxy of the postwar period is ever

     

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