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American Swastika

Inside the White Power Movement's Hidden Spaces of Hate
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Today's white supremacist activism originated in carefully cultivated homes, parties, rituals, music festivals, and digital media and went on to reshape the U.S. political landscape. With powerful case studies, interviews, and first-person accounts, the third edition of American Swastika guides readers through these hidden enclaves of hate to link past circumstances to present conditions. It discusses new players in the world of white power and offers a vital perspective on how white supremacy persists and why we must be vigilant if we want to check its influence. American Swastika is essential reading for anyone hungry to understand the threat of white supremacist extremism to American society. New to the Third Edition Discussion of white extremists' "surprise" return to the American political landscape counters claims that this is "new" by explaining that it emanates from networks and ideas long nurtured outside the public eye An investigation of new hate music genres and changes in the white power music festival scene expands the discussion of how music is essential to white supremacist identity Research on new digital spaces where white supremacists connect and cultivate their culture, including mainstream and fringe networking platforms, retail sites, and video gaming sites demonstrates how online mechanisms serve as entry points for radicalization Discussion of new attention from the Biden administration on domestic terror offers hope for confronting and constraining white supremacy, while also defining many challenges involved
Pete Simi is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Chapman University. He has studied extremist groups and violence for more than 20 years, conducting interviews and observation with a range of violent gangs and political extremists. Dr. Simi is a member of the NCITE at the University of Nebraska, Omaha which is the newest university-based research center funded by the Department of Homeland Security and committed to the scientific study of the causes and consequences of terrorism in the United States and around the world. His research has been funded by the National Institute of Justice, National Science Foundation, Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, Department of Homeland Security, and Department of Defense. Pete Simi on "Learning to Hate,"American Sociological Association "In Charlottesville trial, jurors learn to decode the secret slang of white supremacists," Washington Post, Nov 18, 2021. Robert Futrell is a Professor of Sociology and Chair of the Department of Sociology. He specializes in areas that include: social movements and social change, environmental sociology, urban sustainability, and science and technology. His current social movement scholarship focuses on the cultural and organizational dynamics of social movement persistence and political extremism. "From memes to race war: How extremists use popular culture to lure recruits," Washington Post, April 30, 2021.
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