Description

Book Synopsis

After decades on the social and political margins, far-right groups and movements are enjoying increasing success, and even claiming a place in mainstream electoral politics in many Western political systems.

Research shows that new media like Twitter, YouTube, and community sites likes 4chan and Reddit are increasingly involved with the mobilization of popular support for far-right electoral campaigns, and even organized political violence. These technologies – including other social media, discussion websites, certain online games, chat servers, talk radio, cable news, and print media – are making contemporary far-right ideologies possible in diverse ways, altering methods of recruitment to the extent that they become unrecognizable from far-right movements of the past, and thus, more dangerous.

The results of these new technological processes can be seen in the increasing normalization of far-right values within mainstream culture, politics, and media ecosystems within countries from the United States, Britain, Australia, Germany, and Hungary.

This book brings together recent academic research exploring how far-right groups use new media to recruit followers to extremist beliefs and mobilize political action. In doing so, the book reveals the complex ways that evolving technologies are used both purposively, subtly, and in some cases incidentally, to recruit and mobilize far-right support.



Trade Review

This volume offers a timely, novel, and important contribution to current and emerging research on the nexus of the far right and digital technologies.

-- Tanner Mirrlees, Assistant Professor in the Communication and Digital Media Studies Program at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology

Analysing recruitment tactics, this volume provides significant information on how far right actors and their supporters become engaged in extremist politics, and how their contributions to and consumption of media artefacts on these platforms alters and influences their views and actions.

-- Peter Lentini, Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations, Monash University

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: The Uncanny Political Work of Technologies, Melody Devries, Judith Bessant, and Rob Watts

Part I: Electoral and Institutional Resurgence: Campaigns and Wins

2. Far-Right Recruitment and Mobilization on Facebook: The Case of Australia, Jordan McSwiney

3. Populist Myths and Ethno-Nationalist Fears in Hungary, Simon Bradford and Fin Cullen

4. Multi-Platform Social Capital Mobilization Strategies among Anti-LGBTQIA+ Groups in Taiwan, Kenneth C.C. Yang and Yowei Kang

Part II: Social Network, Social Movement and the Gendered Far-Right

5. Twitter as a Channel for Frame Diffusion: Hashtag Activism and the Virality of #HeterosexualPrideDay, JP Armstrong

6. The Online Manosphere and Misogyny in the Far-Right: The Case of the #thotaudit, Simon Copland

7. “A Positive Identity for Men”: Pathways to Far-Right Participation through Reddit’s /r/MensRights and /r/TheRedPill, Luc S. Cousineau

Part III: Platforms and Alt-Tech Collectivity

8. Soldiers of 4chan: The Role of Anonymous Online Spaces in Backlash Movement Networks, Andrey Kasimov

9. The Internet Hate Machine: On the Weird Collectivity of Anonymous Far-Right Groups, Sal Hagen and Marc Tuters

10. Gab as an Imitated Counterpublic, Greta Jasser

Part IV: Assemblages and Assembled Tools – From Theory to Resistance

11. Moments of Political Gameplay: Game Design as a Mobilization Tool for Far-Right Action, Noel Brett

12. Mobilized But Not (Yet) Recruited: The Case of the Collective Avatar, Melody Devries

13. “Resisting” the Far Right in Racial Capitalism: Sources, Possibilities and Limits, Tanner Mirrlees

Rise of the Far Right: Technologies of

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    A Paperback / softback by Melody Devries, Judith Bessant, Rob Watts

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      View other formats and editions of Rise of the Far Right: Technologies of by Melody Devries

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 11/03/2022
      ISBN13: 9781538158906, 978-1538158906
      ISBN10: 1538158906

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      After decades on the social and political margins, far-right groups and movements are enjoying increasing success, and even claiming a place in mainstream electoral politics in many Western political systems.

      Research shows that new media like Twitter, YouTube, and community sites likes 4chan and Reddit are increasingly involved with the mobilization of popular support for far-right electoral campaigns, and even organized political violence. These technologies – including other social media, discussion websites, certain online games, chat servers, talk radio, cable news, and print media – are making contemporary far-right ideologies possible in diverse ways, altering methods of recruitment to the extent that they become unrecognizable from far-right movements of the past, and thus, more dangerous.

      The results of these new technological processes can be seen in the increasing normalization of far-right values within mainstream culture, politics, and media ecosystems within countries from the United States, Britain, Australia, Germany, and Hungary.

      This book brings together recent academic research exploring how far-right groups use new media to recruit followers to extremist beliefs and mobilize political action. In doing so, the book reveals the complex ways that evolving technologies are used both purposively, subtly, and in some cases incidentally, to recruit and mobilize far-right support.



      Trade Review

      This volume offers a timely, novel, and important contribution to current and emerging research on the nexus of the far right and digital technologies.

      -- Tanner Mirrlees, Assistant Professor in the Communication and Digital Media Studies Program at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology

      Analysing recruitment tactics, this volume provides significant information on how far right actors and their supporters become engaged in extremist politics, and how their contributions to and consumption of media artefacts on these platforms alters and influences their views and actions.

      -- Peter Lentini, Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations, Monash University

      Table of Contents

      1. Introduction: The Uncanny Political Work of Technologies, Melody Devries, Judith Bessant, and Rob Watts

      Part I: Electoral and Institutional Resurgence: Campaigns and Wins

      2. Far-Right Recruitment and Mobilization on Facebook: The Case of Australia, Jordan McSwiney

      3. Populist Myths and Ethno-Nationalist Fears in Hungary, Simon Bradford and Fin Cullen

      4. Multi-Platform Social Capital Mobilization Strategies among Anti-LGBTQIA+ Groups in Taiwan, Kenneth C.C. Yang and Yowei Kang

      Part II: Social Network, Social Movement and the Gendered Far-Right

      5. Twitter as a Channel for Frame Diffusion: Hashtag Activism and the Virality of #HeterosexualPrideDay, JP Armstrong

      6. The Online Manosphere and Misogyny in the Far-Right: The Case of the #thotaudit, Simon Copland

      7. “A Positive Identity for Men”: Pathways to Far-Right Participation through Reddit’s /r/MensRights and /r/TheRedPill, Luc S. Cousineau

      Part III: Platforms and Alt-Tech Collectivity

      8. Soldiers of 4chan: The Role of Anonymous Online Spaces in Backlash Movement Networks, Andrey Kasimov

      9. The Internet Hate Machine: On the Weird Collectivity of Anonymous Far-Right Groups, Sal Hagen and Marc Tuters

      10. Gab as an Imitated Counterpublic, Greta Jasser

      Part IV: Assemblages and Assembled Tools – From Theory to Resistance

      11. Moments of Political Gameplay: Game Design as a Mobilization Tool for Far-Right Action, Noel Brett

      12. Mobilized But Not (Yet) Recruited: The Case of the Collective Avatar, Melody Devries

      13. “Resisting” the Far Right in Racial Capitalism: Sources, Possibilities and Limits, Tanner Mirrlees

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