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Title: Neoecofascism Author: Daniel Rueda Language: en Source: Journal for the Study of Radicalism Volume 14, Number 2, Fall 2020 Michigan State University Press
Humankind alone is no longer the focus of thought, but rather life as a
whole. This striving toward connectedness with the totality of life,
with nature itself, a nature into which we are born, this is the deepest
meaning and the true essence of National Socialist thought.1
âErnst Lehmann, 1934
We are a special part of the natural order, being in it and above it. We
have the potential to become natureâs steward or its destroyer. European
countries should invest in national parks, wilderness preserves, and
wildlife refuges, as well as productive and sustainable farms and
ranches. The natural worldâand our experience of itâis an end in
itself.2
âRichard Spencer, 2017
In a context of increasing concern regarding global warming and its
effects on human society and our planetâs biosphere, environmentalism is
expected to become one of the central political issues of the next
decades. The emergence and success of green movements and parties, a
logical consequence of such situation, is already a reality in several
Western countries. Although there are differences between those
movements, in [End Page 95] general they share values such as
progressivism, liberalism, equalitarianism, and respect for democracy.
Yet this hasnât always been the case in the past, and it wonât
necessarily be the case in the future. History shows us that the
protection of the environment against human intervention and the idea
that the human being is part of the natural world are far from being a
monopoly of any single worldview. In fact, at the beginning of the
twentieth century it was difficult to associate such tendencies to a
particular ideology.3
Although today ecological radicalism is generally associated with
leftist worldviews, its radical right counterpart, ecofascism, remains a
reality in a series of contemporary political groups and it could be a
political force to be reckoned with in the near future in countries such
as the United States. This article starts from the assumption that
political demands (such as environmentalism) only express concrete
content after being located within a discursive system, a view
introduced by the poststructuralist theorist Ernesto Laclau.4 This means
that ecological radicalism cannot be a priori associated with any
particular ideological movement. Therefore, the fact that the radical
right âusesâ it cannot logically be denounced as a deceitful
appropriation. A similar view is formulated by Janet Biehl and Peter
Stauden-maier (although on a different basis), the authors of what has
become the reference publication on ecofascism.5 Only this ârelativistâ
framework can guarantee a rigorous and objective examination of
ecofascism and prevent ideological biases.
This article is divided in two sections. The first is a brief history of
the genesis of ecofascism and an analysis of the core ideas of its
doctrine. It will trace the origins of this branch of fascism that began
to form in Germany at the end of the nineteenth century and that was
highly influential among certain sectors of the NSDAP
(Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter Partei) until the fall of the
Nazi regime in 1945. This section will also focus on analyzing what kind
of ecological radicalism was formulated by the early ecofascists and
what were its connections with racist and authoritarian discourses.
The second section centers on an illustrative case study that can point
up some of the key characteristics of neoecofascism, the contemporary
version of ecofascism, and how they compare to the latterâs. It will
focus on the United States, a country that has witnessed a rise of
radical right groups and discourses in the last decade6 and in which
several terrorists have included [End Page 96] ecofascist remarks in
their manifestos, as we shall see further on. Finally, the differences
between the many right-wing environmentalist stances will be outlined in
order to avoid the semantic inflation of the term âecofascism.â
Ecofascism was first and foremost an offshoot of Romanticism, an
intellectual movement whose impact on Germany during the nineteenth
century is impossible to exaggerate. In political terms, Romanticism was
primarily a reaction against the Enlightenment and its core assumptions.
To put it baldly, to reason, individualism, and civic communitarianism
the Romantics opposed a celebration of introspection and the emotional,
a nostalgia for a lost community (be that ethnic or religious) and an
emphasis on rootedness against cosmopolitanism and universalism.
That being said, it is important to note that Romanticism was and is a
complex and rich cultural movement that gave origin to several and often
contradictory tendencies on both ends of the political spectrum.7 In
fact, even critics of Romanticism, who tend to condemn it as part of the
so-called Counterenlightenment, such as Isaiah Berlin8 or Tim Blanning,9
admit that its alleged negative influence on modernity and liberalism
needs to be nuanced. Moreover, it is important not to lose sight of the
fact that, as authors like Zygmunt Bauman,10 Theodor Adorno, and Max
Horkheimer11 have noted, some of the key ideas that emanated from the
Enlightenment (such as instrumental reason) were also pivotal for the
fascist movement. Be that as it may, this work will focus on the
Romantic currents that paved the way for the advent of ecofascism,
therefore concentrating on some forms of Romanticism at the expense of
others. The connection between Romanticism and fascism has been pointed
out by the main authors of the fascism studies field, such as Roger
Griffin,12 Emilio Gentile,13 George L. Mosse,14 Zeev Sternhell,15
Stanley G. Payne16 and Robert Paxton.17
Germany was the nation in which, according to Biehl and Staudenmaier,
ecofascism was first articulated.18 The German Romantics played a key
role in shaping their countryâs nation-building project (it is not by
coincidence that one of the first German intellectuals who promoted
nationalism was Johann Gottlieb Fichte, a philosopher highly influenced
by the Romantics)19 and they [End Page 97] did so by opposing the kind
of nationalism that was being formulated by the French revolutionaries
at the time. To civic and contractual nationalism, the German Romantic
nationalists of the nineteenth century opposed a union based on
ethnicity and a shared and unique culture,20 a solution related to the
fact that there was a high degree of political and territorial
fragmentation of the Germanic lands, a situation that made it difficult
to find common institutions and political authorities. Lacking the
political, these thinkers turned to the ethnic.
This led some nationalist thinkers to differentiate between German
nationalism (ethnic and Romantic) and French nationalism (civic and
liberal), a distinction that was advocated mainly by French scholars and
that has been partly contested since its formulation.21 The idea that
the German nation was being built with too much emphasis on irrational,
ethnic, and xenophobic elements is not a contemporary view, for it was
already pointed out by nineteenth-century thinkers. Such is the case of
Federico Chabod, an Italian historian who drew a distinction between the
German Volk based on spiritualism and racial identity) and the liberal
and contractualist idea of the nation that had emerged in France and
Italy.22 Ernest Renan, one of the most important theoreticians of
nationalism, shared this view and pointed to Romanticism as a dangerous
ingredient in nation-building processes.23
It is in this historical context that the two most important ideological
movements for the advent of ecofascism appeared: Blut und Boden (Blood
and Soil) philosophy and völkisch (which literally means âfolkish,â
although the translation of the word Volk is hard to make outside the
German context)24 movement.
The notion of Blut und Boden emerged in the late nineteenth century and
initially referred to literary and cultural trends rather than to
political tendencies.25 The core idea behind this slogan is that the two
main components of a nation (here understood as an ethnos, not as a
demos) are a shared ascendancy (and thus a series of racial common
traits) and a shared territory. Those two components are only
distinguished for conceptual purposes, for they are actually two
inseparable and integral parts of the national soul or spirit
(Volksgeist) that permeates the totality of the territory of the nation
and its inhabitants. This nostalgic longing for transcendent unity is
one of the strong points of the Romantic anthropological project.26
This means that nature, which had been restored by the Romantics as an
active and mysterious force against rationalist and scientificist
postulates, is [End Page 98] presented as a part of the nation. The
Volk, its national community and its territory are one, bridged by a
metaphysic and nationalist understanding of the world. Men (here, German
men) are thus completely rooted in their fatherland, and their character
is supposed to mirror the landscape in which they were born. This
allowed some nationalist thinkers to posit that whereas the Germanic
peoples were inward-looking, mysterious, and spiritually rich (inasmuch
as they lived in a dark territory full of dense forests), the Jews were
a materialistic and mundane people because they came from the deserts
(and they also were uprooted and inevitably cosmopolitan insofar as they
had abandoned their original land).27
The key idea here is that according to the Blood and Soil creed, there
is a metaphysical symbiosis between the Volk, its culture, and nature.28
Inasmuch as nature is part of this Volksgeist it logically becomes
something that needs to be protected, not because it is a vulnerable
part of our biosphere or because exploiting it is dangerous in economic
terms, but because is part of the nation. This is the core belief behind
the ecofascist concerns towards nature, a belief related to identity
anxieties rather than to a progressive longing for environmental
justice. It is clearly connected to the Romantic critique of
industrialization and urbanization as well as to modern idealizations of
the natural world,29 although here an essential nationalist element is
added. Nature is portrayed as a source of mysticism that cannot be
understood rationally and that is closely connected to the national
ethos of a concrete territory. It is therefore ânationalized.â Thus,
defending nature is logically akin to defending the nation and the Volk.
This synthesis between naturalism and Counterenlightenment ideas was
formulated mainly by Ernst Moritz and Wilhelm Riehl.30 Moritz was a
German nationalist who advocated a homogeneous society based on medieval
values (which mainly are, according to him, authority, spiritualism, and
corporatism) and who fueled the growing xenophobia against the French in
the context of the Napoleonic Wars.31 In 1815 he wrote a diatribe
against industrialization in which he defended the interconnectedness of
nature, the human being and social community.32 Riehl for his part was a
folklorist who insisted on the romantic idea that nature is somehow more
genuine and real than society33 and on how the Volk is inevitably rooted
to a particular territory. He defended a return to traditional
hierarchies and to an organic political system,34 thereby anticipating
some of the core assumptions of National Socialism. [End Page 99]
This amalgamation of nature and society soon became instrumental for the
most reactionary among German nationalists. Raoul Heinrich Francé, a
German botanist and philosopher, formulated in 1920 the idea of
Lebensgesetze, positing that nature and social arrangements were
inevitably based on the same premises (inasmuch as, following again the
romantic Weltanschauung, the cosmos is an organic unity and thus every
part of it is connected to the others).35 This had the implication that
society would logically need to be based on hierarchy, racial division,
patriarchy, and the principle of survival of the fittest. Furthermore,
it implied that human beings were not necessarily special creatures, a
mindset that anticipated some of the most brutal expressions of Nazism
according to Robert Pois.36 The notion of Lebensgesetze also entailed
that nature needs to be saved from harm, for not doing so would mean not
recognizing it as part of the cosmic and mystic unity that was so
important for FrancĂ© and his disciples.37 As Franz-Josef BrĂŒggemeier,
Mark Cioc, and Thomas Zeller note:
Homeland and nature protectionists saw it as their task not only to
protect rare plants, endangered animals, and natural monuments, but also
to preserve local customs and national traditions, following the dictum
âkeep the German people [Volkstum] strong and wholesome.â What kept
Germans powerful and pure, in turn, was the strength Germans drew from
preserving their traditions, monuments, and land. Volk, homeland, and
nature were intertwined.38
The völkisch movement, the other main ideological precursor of
ecofascism, appeared during the late nineteenth century as well. This
was a period of nation-building (the country was finally unified in
1871) and rapid industrialization in Germany. The rivalry with France,
as mentioned, had prompted an intellectual response against the
philosophes and their rational and scientific worldviews. According to
George Mosse, the movement was apolitical when it emerged, not because
of a lack of political views, but in the sense that it didnât have clear
political goals.39 Moreover, it is important to keep in mind that there
wasnât a united völkisch movement, for âinstead of a single, organized
political force, an uncoordinated collection of völkisch groups and
individuals emergedâ40 and that the common ground of these groupuscules
âwas limited to agreement that the German nation should be based on the
concept of the German Volk, defined in racial terms.â41
The völkisch movement embraced a worldview whereby nature was far from
being mechanic or dead (as some scientificist thinkers propounded) [End
Page 100] and claimed that it should instead be thought of as a living
and mystic entity (a view, as mentioned, defended by the German Romantic
philosophers) that could represent a spiritual antidote to
industrialization and modern life. To urban life and capitalist
modernity, some völkisch writers and poets opposed the idea of an
idyllic German nature by creating the Heimatkunstbewegung42 (Homeland
Art Movement), from which emerged the Wandervogel group (literally, bird
of passage), which was part of the important German Youth Movement, an
organization highly influenced by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche.43
The Wandervogel organized group hikes for young people as a protest
against modern society and soon became a source of anti-Semitic and
ethnic nationalist ideas.44
Originally neither the Blut und Boden nor the völkisch worldviews
espoused a scientific form of racism. This is because they had as one of
their core assumptions a rejection of rationalism and science, which
they associated with modern decadence and materialistic disenchantment.
Their anti-Semitism was spiritual and metaphysical, and therefore more
related to thinkers such as Julius Evola45 than to Arthur de Gobineau or
Houston Chamberlain.46 Rather than pseudoscientific conferences, these
movements preferred to celebrate the summer solstice and other Nordic
pagan festivities.47 In a nutshell, they had more in common with Helena
Blavatskyâs esoteric Theosophy (who gave birth to the more overtly
racist Ariosophy a few decades later)48 than to scientificist
worldviews.
These romantic nationalists thought that the German race was unique
inasmuch as it was homogeneous and divine, and therefore not corrupted
by foreign elements. Wilhelm Riehl, whom we have identified as a
âprotoecofascist,â compared the Germans to a tree, well-rooted in the
soil but pointing to the sky (i.e., to the spiritual).49 Yet when at the
beginning of the twentieth century (and especially after the First World
War) these ideas were politicized they inevitably lost some of their
mystic and spiritual traits and partly embraced the by then mainstream
scientific biological worldview. The fact that during the interwar
period so many of the young participants of the Wandervogel movement
fled to far-right and proto-Nazi parties such as the DNVP
(Deutschnationale Volkspartei), the German Socialist Party
(Deutschsozialistische Partei), or the Pan-German League (Alldeutscher
Verband) is symptomatic of a shift in the objectives of the Völkisch
movement. According to George Mosse, 1918 can be considered the year of
the political [End Page 101] systemization of the völkisch ideology,50
roughly coinciding with the first steps of the convulse Weimar Republic.
It is hardly surprising that these ideas ended up permeating some
sectors of the main German fascist party, the NSDAP. The man charged
with incorporating them into the Nazi rule context was Walther Darré, a
pioneer in environmentalism who might be the most famous among all the
ecofascist ideologues and politicians. He was politicized at an early
stage of his life when he joined the Artamanen Gesellschaft (a völkisch
group who propounded a return to nature in order to escape modern urban
society) and became an agrarianist.51 During the 1930s Darré turned into
the most prominent member of the Blood and Soil movement and claimed
that the German land needed to be protected both against the Jews and
against uncontrolled industrialization.52
Darré defended the need of restoring the connection between Blut and
Boden, i.e., between the German Völk and its territory, thereby
promoting imperialist goals related to the idea of Lebensraum (inasmuch
as after 1919 millions of Germans were living outside the frontiers of
their original country, mainly in Poland and Czechoslovakia),
anti-Semitic views (inasmuch as he posited that Jews, who werenât part
of the Volk, needed to be expelled from German soil) and also
environmentalist and social policies (insofar as both the Volk and its
biosphere were deemed worthy of protection). In 1933, he became Reich
minister of food and agriculture, a prestigious position he held until
1942.
Darré was the most fervent intellectual of the so-called green wing of
the Nazi party, which counted among its members other important figures
such as Fritz Todt, Alwin Seifert, and Rudolf Hess.53 Darré, Todt, and
Seifert managed to implement some environmentalist policies, mainly
related to organic agriculture, reforestation, protection of endangered
plants and animals, and industrial and commercial restrictions. This led
inevitably to a series of confrontations with important Nazi politicians
who werenât particularly enthusiastic about ecological measures, such as
Martin Bormann, Joseph Goebbels, and Reinhard Heydrich.54 After all, the
environmentalist tendencies within the National Socialist ideology were
only a part of a complex and often contradictory worldview, and issues
were continually aroused when it came to translating them into concrete
policies.55
This was the brief history of ecofascism, a doctrine inspired by
Romanticism, nationalism, and racism that appeared in Germany (although
it had followers in other countries, such as Italy)56 and managed to
have an important [End Page 102] impact on the Nazi regime. Far from
being a cynical manipulation of noble intentions, German ecofascism was
a genuine environmentalist ideology, although one deeply intertwined
with violent, imperialist, and racist views. There was a sincere will to
protect the German environment within the green wing of the NSDAP,
despite its rationale being totally at odds with todayâs green partiesâ
political projects. That being said, Hitler wasnât particularly
enthusiastic about his partyâs green wing, and the importance of
ecofascism within the regime was limited, as Anna Bramwell has shown.57
After 1945 the fascist doctrine and its supporters were swept away by
the calamitous defeat of the Axis at the end of the Second World War and
became marginal throughout the West. Yet this didnât imply the end of
ecofascist tendencies. As we shall see, today ecofascism is going
through a process of rearticulation, especially in the United States.
How does this new ideology, which will be called neoecofascism, differ
from the original doctrine? How has it adapted to the contemporary era?
Could it become a mass movement or a mainstream ideology in the future,
as was the case with the Blood and Soil ideal and the small völkisch
movements a century ago?
If today there is a country in which neofascism (which is the word
conventionally used to refer to fascist movements and ideologies after
1945)58 is a relatively flourishing ideology, it is the United States.
This article will employ the definition of âfascismâ formulated by Roger
Griffin, who defined the so-called âfascist minimumâ (i.e., the core
aspects of the fascist ideology that apply to every form of fascism) as
[A] genuinely revolutionary, trans-class form of anti-liberal, and in
the last analysis, anti-conservative nationalism. As such it is an
ideology deeply bound up with modernization and modernity, one which has
assumed a considerable variety of external forms to adapt itself to the
particular historical and national context in which it appears. . . .
[Fascism] seeks to end the degeneration affecting the nation under
liberalism, and to bring about a radical renewal of its social,
political and cultural life as part of what was widely imagined to be
the new era being inaugurated in Western civilization.59 [End Page 103]
Drawing from this definition, it is possible to identify several
American political organizations and intellectuals as neofascist. The
group that stands out in this respect is without question the Alt-Right
(an abbreviation of âalternative rightâ), a cluster of loosely connected
intellectuals, online groups, and activists who profess anti-democratic,
anti-liberal, anti-conservative (it is important to highlight that the
Alt-Right is genuinely different from the rest of the right, including
the so-called Alt-Lite),60 white nationalist, racialist, and patriarchal
views.61 This movement began to form at the beginning of this decade
when Richard Spencer (its most visible face) launched The Alternative
Right webzine. The Alt-Right shot to fame in 2016 when Donald Trump
chose Steve Bannon (the editor of Breibart News, which he described as
the platform for the Alt-Right) as his campaign director. At that moment
this radical movement âwent from obscurity to infamy,â in the words of
Thomas Main.62
Despite the fact that some of its idiosyncratic features make the
Alt-Right a peculiar movement (e.g., its dispersed organization, the
continuous use of irony, its presence online, and the consequent use of
internet codes) that shouldnât prevent us from seeing it as a political
group with a well-articulated ideology that can be systematically
analyzed.63 In fact, we have previously noted that both the völkisch
groups (who originally tended to be apolitical) and the Blood and Soil
ideology were initially a myriad of dispersed stances and organizations,
before they were articulated into more consistent worldviews. The type
of neofascism that we are witnessing today might be at the moment in a
âpreparadigmatic stateâ similar to the one that existed in pre-1914
Europe, when despite the blossoming of radical right groups across the
European continent, there wasnât a corpus of ideas capable of
homogenizing and structuring the groups.
Moreover, some of the Alt-Rightâs extravagant elements might be in fact
more politically rational than they seem. For example, the continued use
of ironic detachment is probably due not only to the fact that the
Alt-Rightâs online community is inhabited by young people for whom this
rhetorical device is essential, but also to a conscious will to engage
in radical positions without confronting the social consequences that
derive from doing so.64 The Daily Stormer, a website associated with the
Alt-Right, stated in its (leaked) guidelines for potential authors that
âthe tone of the site should be light so that the unindoctrinated canât
tell if we are joking or not.â65 As Jason Wilson points out, irony and
comic ambiguity are clearly âdiscursive weaponsâ in [End Page 104] the
hands of the Alt-Right.66 In fact the movementâs neo-ecofascist stance
(which is analyzed below) has also been filtered through irony and
internet codes, giving birth to mottos such as âsave bees, not
refugeesâ67 and to groups such as The Pine Tree Gang,68 whose members
use the pine tree emoji as an identity marker.
In any case, the existence of outlandish and particular traits within
the Alt-Rightâs discourse doesnât imply that the movement shouldnât be
associated with ideologies from the past, but that it is a new
manifestation of them. In fact, rather than it being a decentralized
fascist organization that uses memes and thrives online what should
shock us is a contemporary fascist organization that acts exactly as its
predecessors from the interwar period. The Alt-Right is just the
twenty-firstâcentury expression of an old phenomenon. For example,
although some might point to the fact that today thereâs not a fascist
mass party in order to justify their skepticism towards the existence of
contemporary fascism, Roger Griffin noted in 2008 (two years before the
emergence of the Alt-Right) that present-day fascist organizations are
âgroupuscularâ and rhizomatic and focus on spreading their ideas rather
than on creating competitive political parties.69
This fits with Thomas J. Mainâs view of the Alt-Right as ânot a
constituency with political goals but an intellectual movement that
shapes how people think about politics.â70 Such shift from mass
mobilizations to small-group influence is related to one of the most
important contemporary thinkers of the radical right: Alain De Benoist.
Partly drawing from Antonio Gramsciâs ideas on politics and culture, De
Benoist and other thinkers from the Nouvelle Droite developed the plan
of articulating a meta-political approach to politics, i.e., one based
on a will to carry a cultural struggle that affects the whole political
sphere instead of creating a political party that would stand in general
elections. This implies favoring small but influential organizations
over mass parties, although these are of course the main political
actors that need to be influenced.
Although neofascism had a relative success (given the adverse historical
context) in the United States during the 1950s and the 1960s, the
Alt-Right didnât evolved from such ideology. Thomas J. Main, arguably
the author of the most important work on the Alt-Rightâs ideology,
emphasizes that the Alt-Right is not the product of American neo-Nazism,
but of paleoconservatism. Paleoconservatism is a branch of conservatism
that, in opposition to neoconservatism, [End Page 105] took a drastic
turn in the mid-1980s and developed four major themes: a radical
rejection of liberal democracy, anti-Semitism, racialism, and
anti-Americanism.71
This means that the members of the Alt-Right derive their ideals from
thinkers such as Paul Gottfried rather than George Lincoln Rockwell (the
famous neofascist who founded the American Nazi Party in 1959), although
American neo-Nazism remains an important influence within the
movement.72 Despite being an offshoot of conservatism, paleoconservatism
is undoubtedly part of the radical right. Gottfried, for example, went
as far as to praise Mussolini as the founder of a more acceptable type
of fascism, allegedly significantly different from the German.73
The passage from paleoconservatism to the Alt-Right, headed by Richard
Spencer, is therefore not a passage from a moderate form of conservatism
to a radical one, but a significant qualitative change between two forms
of right-wing radicalism. A historical analogy might be pertinent to
clarify this. It could be said that the difference between the
paleoconservatives and the Alt-Right is parallel to the one between the
Konservative Revolution and the Nazis. Undoubtedly, thinkers such as
Oswald Spengler, Carl Schmitt, Moeller van der Bruck, Ernst Niekisch, or
Edgar Julius Jung were essential influences for the NSDAP, but they
certainly didnât share all of its ideas, nor can all of them be
considered fascists.
The Alt-Right has its own âgreen wing,â although inasmuch as ecofascism
is today more marginal than it was a century ago (and fascism itself is
incomparably weaker), it is inevitably not as well-organized as its
German precursor. However, we should bear in mind that the formation of
the ecofascist ideology in Germany took decades to materialize. This
could also be the case of a new form of ecofascism (which has been
labeled in this article simply as âneoecofascism,â following the
diachronic distinction between fascism and neofascism), of which only
the first steps can be observed at the moment but that could flourish in
a context of global warming and environmental anxieties.
Such context is a truly transformative one, for climate change
represents a challenge for the whole political and economic system. The
unequivocal scientific evidence presents a world of rising global
temperatures, warming [End Page 106] oceans, glacial retreat, rising sea
levels, and extreme climate events. The global character of these
dangers and their capacity of quick disruption will defy not only our
sociopolitical systems, but also our worldviews and some of our most
basic assumptions. Capitalism will have to adapt to this bleak picture,
and if it fails to do so, it will be naturally challenged by both the
radical right and the radical left. In such circumstances it is
inevitable that the totality of the political spectrum becomes aware of
these challenges and modifies strategies accordingly, incorporating both
a cognitive map of the situation and a series of potential solutions to
it.
American neoecofascism is already adapting to this condition. Richard
Spencer himself pointed at the importance of the environment for the
Alt-Right in the 2017 manifesto What it Means to be Alt-Right.74 In that
brief proclamation, after outlining the centrality of race and
anti-Semitism within the Alt-Rightâs ideological program, he refers to
manâs relationship with nature. Just like the Romantics and völkisch
thinkers, he states that a human being is part of the natural order,
although he considers it as âbeing in it and above it,â75 thereby
manifesting the tensions between right-wing hierarchism and naturalism,
two tendencies that were already in opposition in early German
ecofascism, as noted by Frank Uekötter.76 According to Spencer, âthe
natural worldâand our experience of itâis an end in itself,â77 which
means rejecting the conservative view of nature (based on aesthetic
contemplation and economic exploitation)78 and embracing ecofascist
postulates.
As Matthew Phelan notes, Spencerâs ecofascist proclamations are not only
the assertion of a series of ideas but also a stance against other views
within the American radical right, such as âthe idea that climate change
is a hoax, that the environmental movement is a crypto-socialist bid for
state intervention (effectively, the Koch-funded Tea Party line).â79
This tension between those who spread conspiracy theories that point to
the left and to certain elites and neoecofascists will most likely be
the main cleavage within the contemporary radical right regarding
climate change and environmental protection. In any case, the popularity
of the environmentalist movement (Richard Spencer himself praised Greta
Thunberg recently)80 and the undeniable scientific evidence invite to
foresee a radical right that pays attention to such issues rather than a
âdenialistâ one.
The Alt-Right has also shown interest in other contemporary political
issues related to the environmentalist movement. One of them is food
[End Page 107] consumption. As Vasile StÄnescu has shown, the Alt-Right
has engaged in several debates concerning diet and vegetarianism.81 One
of the positions that have resulted from such a rapprochement with
contemporary dietary concerns is a cult for milk consumption as a
synonym of masculinity and racial purity that reproduces some
nineteenth-century colonialist stances.82 Others have embraced
vegetarianism (as famously did both Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler)
or veganism, insisting on their online messages on how such dietary
option is a proof of Aryan strength and connectedness with all living
beings rather than something that belongs to âpacifistic hippy
caricatures.â83
Some of these positions are strongly influenced by neopagan and mystic
currents.84 This commitment with mythical discourses can be found in
prominent Alt-Right figures. Such is the case of Greg Johnson, the
editor-in-chief of Counter Currents Publishing, one of the pillars of
Alt-Right publishing.85 In 2011, while reviewing a book that fantasizes
about Hyperborea (the mythical polar land that is supposed to be the
original home of the Aryan race), Johnson stated that the movement
needed to focus on myths rather than in facts insofar as âmyths, unlike
science and policy studies, resonate deeply in the soul and reach the
wellsprings of action. Myths can inspire collective action to change the
world.â86 This statement is as well a diatribe against âthe
insufficiency of backwards-looking conservatism and data-driven
empiricism to preserve and elevate our race.â87
It is therefore hardly surprising that this neofascist revival has
developed links with American neopagan circles that engage in
environmentalist stances. Groups such as the Wolves of Vinland (a Norse
neopagan organization based in Virginia), who promote white nationalist
and male chauvinistic views, have been found to have links with the
National Policy Institute, headed by Richard Spencer.88 The Asatru Folk
Assembly, another neopagan group, has also prospered thanks to the
emergence of the Alt-Right.89 The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC)
characterizes these groups as neo-völkisch and links their ideas to
âideals and myths that are derived from the Völkisch movement of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries.â90 These organizations share with
their ideological forebears a view of nature as a redeemer from the
evils of modernity and urban life, along with a patriarchal longing for
an uncivilized lifestyle that can liberate forces that are allegedly
repressed in modern society. [End Page 108]
It is also symptomatic that Richard Spencer has created special links
with movements such as the Nordic Resistance Movement (Nordiska
motstÄndsrörelsen),91 a Nordic supranational association (established in
Sweden, Norway, and Finland) that emphasizes the importance of
environmentalism and thereby continues the ecofascist enterprise.92 This
neoecofascist connection with the Nordic countries is far from trivial.
Finland is the home country of Pentti Linkola, an influential (and
openly ecofascist) thinker whose works advocate dictatorship and
downsizing population and who claims that âeverything that we have
developed during the past one-hundred years needs to be destroyed.â93 An
unknown thinker outside Finland, Linkolaâs renewal of ecofascist
postulates is becoming more and more popular in Alt-Right circles.94
This mystic and neopagan road to neoecofascism allows us to better
understand the growing cult of Savitri Devi (a central figure within
post-1945 ecofascism) among alt-righters.95 Savitri Devi (born Maximiani
Portas) was an important representative of postwar esoteric fascism96 as
well as a committed advocate of animal rights and âdeep ecology,â a
philosophy that stresses natureâs inherent value. She claimed that
Hitler was a Hindu avatar (i.e., the incarnation of Vishnu and therefore
a kind of semi-god) and even disseminated Nazi propaganda in West
Germany in 1948, before engaging with the international neofascist
movement (meeting George Lincoln Rockwell on several occasions) and then
moving to India with her husband, a Bengal Brahmin who shared her
ideological convictions regarding the common Aryan ancestry of
Indo-European societies.
Savitri Devi could act as an intellectual bridge between ecofascism and
neoecofascism, for her ideas are capable of pursuing the ecofascist
enterprise that started at the end of the nineteenth century while at
the same time being appealing to todayâs and tomorrowâs right-wing
radicals. Furthermore, her works on animal rights and environmentalism
(The Impeachment of Man,97 written in 1959, being the most important
among them) go beyond the nineteenth-century Romanticism professed by
the aforementioned German thinkers and can connect with contemporary New
Age and biocentrist ideas.
But the influence of Hindu mysticism (an important source of myths and
ideas for the German Blut und Boden movement)98 among alt-righters goes
beyond Savitri Deviâs peculiar amalgamation of deep ecology, Hinduism,
and Nazism. Julius Evola (born Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola), an important
intellectual of postwar fascism, is also popular among the American
radical [End Page 109] right. Evola held a kind of spiritual and
metaphysical racism more similar to the most mystic factions of the Blut
und Boden groups than to biological racism (which he criticized).99 He
posited that twentieth-century Europe was going through the Kali Yuga,
an era of chaos and decay according to the Hindu tradition, and that
Hitler and Mussolini represented a possibility to end it and restore the
rule of the Aryan race.100 Therefore, it was necessary to âride the
tiger of modernityâ to overcome this âage of dissolution.â101 Julius
Evola was surprisingly praised by Steve Bannon102 and his idea of the
Kali Yuga has become a meme among alt-righters (who created images of a
surfing skeleton with the message âSurf the Kali Yugaâ).103
This Evolian understanding of the Kali Yuga, whose reception is, like
that of other radical ideas, both genuine and somewhat ironic, leads us
to a key component of neoecofascism that represents yet another
similarity with its ideological forebear, i.e., the idea of pessimism,
closely related to the notions of decadence and palingenesis. It was
probably introduced into the radical right by Oswald Spengler104 (under
the inspiration of Friedrich Nietzsche) at the beginning of the
twentieth century and became a commonplace for right-wing radicals ever
since. According to Roger Griffin, both the sensation of decadence and
pessimism (associated with modernityâs malaises) are central to fascist
ideology.105 In his analysis of George Sorelâs works as the intellectual
origins of fascism, Zeev Sternhell points at the importance of pessimism
as well.106 The idea of inevitable decay leads fascist thinkers to
imagine an apocalyptic rebirth generally associated with a national (or
ethnic) resurgence.107
The most prominent Alt-Right figures have expressed this sensation of
decay on several occasions. According to Richard Spencer the situation
of the United States can be compared to the decline of the Roman Empire,
and such decline is orchestrated by elites who âwant a world without
roots . . . a world without meaning . . . a flat grey-on-grey world, one
economic market for them to manipulate.â108 He has also defined U.S.
society as being perverse and decadent and the United States as a
diseased country.109 Against this dramatic situation he propounds the
creation of a âwhite ethno-state on the North American continent . . . a
reconstitution of the Roman Empire.â110 Such new civilization âwould be,
to borrow the title of a novel by Theodor Herzl (one of the founding
fathers of Zionism), an Altneulandâan old, new country.â111
Climate change, with its pessimistic prospect of natural disasters and
social chaos, is a great opportunity for this kind of discourse to
thrive. After all, [End Page 110] fascism grows from the seeds of fear
and turmoil, which is why Roger Griffin refers to it using the
theological concept of creatio ex profundis (an act of creativity
defying the unknown, or the chaotic).112 This sense of apocalyptic
decline was shared by völkisch thinkers at the end of the nineteenth
century who saw the natural world being threatened by the industrial
revolution and capitalism.113 It is not hard to imagine the return of
such discourses, which didnât fade away after the Second World War but
were rearticulated by important radical right thinkers such as Ernst
JĂŒnger114 and, as mentioned previously, by esoteric fascists such as
Julius Evola and Savitri Devi. The fascist tradition already harbors an
important focus on decline and pessimism but, more important, it has
produced an amalgamation of such mindsets with environmental anxiety.
Thus the radical right, as the Alt-Right is proof of, possesses a great
âideological reserveâ for the ongoing climate change distress, and it is
already making use of it in order to radicalize American right-wingers,
especially the youngsters. As Jeet Heer pointed out:
This combination of a white nationalism with angst about the prospects
for human survival is a perfect recipe for radicalizing young
right-wingers and taking Trumpian themes to a new level of extremism.
Instead of the merely restorationist day-dream of âmaking American great
again,â the extreme right is using social media agitprop and the
propaganda of the deed to harden young white Americans for a global race
war fought over diminishing resources. The very real dangers of climate
change provide race war fantasists the dystopian background they need to
give urgency to their violent agenda.115
That said, American neoecofascism faces at least two important
challenges in comparison with its ideological forebears. First, the
demographic structure of the United States has little to do with
nineteenth-century Germany. Ecofascism was professed mainly by members
of the urban middle class, who romanticized rural life and the figure of
the traditional peasant, but the challenge for contemporary
neoecofascists is that such world seems to have faded away in Western
societies. Agricultural mechanization and technological advances have
reduced agricultural workers to a minority, and one in which immigrants
play an important role. Yet it remains possible to appeal politically to
this social group, as Trump has done on several occasions.116 This is
because political imaginaries are de facto autonomous from social
reality, as the âimagined natureâ created by the young völkisch
militants shows. [End Page 111]
The Alt-Right could focus on ideal representations of rural American
life, as opposed to the lifestyle of the âcoastal elites,â a
well-established ideological trope in the United States,117 although
that would imply a heterogeneous implementation in geographic terms. Be
that as it may, it is clear that contemporary neoecofascists might have
to engage in New Age forms of Romanticism rather than in idealizations
of rural life, inasmuch as we now live in a ârurban worldâ (i.e., a
system in which rural and urban spaces are interpenetrated) in which it
is increasingly difficult to identify and romanticize the country life.
Second, contemporary notions of nature are different from the ones that
emerged in the wake of industrialization. German Romantics reacted to
both industrial capitalism and scientific rationalism by âreenchantingâ
nature, thereby perceiving it as a source of mystic energies that
couldnât be understood from a positivist point of view. It is evident
that this view of nature still operates today, but in a more marginal
way. Modernity meant the demystification of the world, but such a shift
was accompanied by the birth of new political metanarratives and
spiritualist (and often orientalist) reactions, whereas postmodernity
has made those difficult to develop. Among the three main
representations of nature according to Serge Moscovici (organic,
cybernetic, and mechanistic),118 the first (defended by the Romantics)
seems to be the least popular, which makes it difficult to spread the
idea that thereâs a mystic unity among the nation, the ethnos, and the
ânationalâ natural world. That said, the capability of nationalism to
bridge heterogeneous elements (e.g., nature and patriotism) shouldnât be
underestimated, and neoecofascists might be able to do so in the future.
Although this article focuses on the Alt-Right, there are other
movements that integrate environmentalist and radical-right or
right-wing stances in their discourses. For example, among conservative
environmentalists it is relatively easy to find the idea that
immigration and overpopulation are to blame for environmental collapse.
These ideas are sometimes disseminated by single intellectuals who,
despite having links with right-wing organizations, donât offer such a
consistent worldview but instead will propound concrete ideas or policy
proposals for years to come. Rather than overtly neofascist [End Page
112] views (which tend to be revolutionary, idealistic, and
ultranationalist), these authors present their proposals as pragmatic
solutions to environmental and economic problems. Although they are
closer to conservatism than to fascism, their views can easily be
assimilated and appropriated by more radical groups and could become a
gateway to these.
The most famous among such thinkers is probably John Tanton, the
recently deceased founder of the Federation for American Immigration
Reform (FAIR). Although he has been included in the list of contemporary
ecofascist by several pundits,119,120 he should be seen instead as a
conservative environmentalist. Apart from advocating eugenics121 and
funding several anti-immigration organizations, Tanton is known for his
articulation of xenophobic and environmentalist stances. According to
him, in order to protect Americaâs biosphere it is imperative to stop
mass immigration, inasmuch as overpopulation is a threat to nature.122
This idea is shared by Jared Taylor (a white nationalist with links to
the Alt-Right), who wonders âhow can we possibly claim to be fighting
environmental degradation or hope for energy independence when we import
a million or more people every year?â123 Tanton and his ecoconservative
supporters were influenced by the neo-Malthusian ideas that spread
throughout the United States during the 1960s,124 which are a good
example of a potential intellectual bridge between different forms of
right-wing environmentalism inasmuch as the control of population growth
can be used for multiple ideological purposes.
These views have partly infiltrated American environmental organizations
such as the Sierra Club.125 Tanton himself was part of the club and
actively tried to turn it into an anti-immigration political
organization.126 His efforts were not in vain, for until the 1980s the
Sierra Club was in fact a promoter of the idea that there is a
correlation between mass immigration and environmental damage.127 The
internal debate of 1997â98 was of major importance not only for the
Club, but also for the anti-immigration-environmentalist synthesis. In
it a group of members claimed that in order to protect the American
environment not only must there be a reduction of natural population
growth but an end of immigration would also be necessary. The focus was
not only on immigrants, but also on national minorities deemed to be
âpoorly educated and highly fertile.â128
Among ecoconservatives contemporary demographic and social anxieties are
thereby linked to a concern for environmental well-being, a path that
some right-wing governments are starting to follow. This is already the
case [End Page 113] in Austria,129 Hungary,130 and Poland.131 It would
not be surprising if some of these turn into a form of
ecoauthoritarianism whereby some forms of illiberalism and social
control are justified in the name of preventing or fixing environmental
problems. Environmental authoritarianism is for now absent in the West,
but it is already a reality in China, where climate distress and a high
degree of air pollution have justified topâdown solutions without any
mechanism for channeling public involvement within the process.132
However, the ecoconservative and the ecoauthoritarian intertwinements
between the ethnos and the environment, although part of the illiberal
tradition, seem to be somewhat âdisenchantedâ and rationalized, inasmuch
as they are presented with socioeconomic arguments rather than a
transformative point of view. This is a key difference between
neoecofascism and other right-wing ecologist tendencies. Whereas
neoecofascists yearn for a radical cultural change whereby our
conceptions about race, nature and the nation would be swept away,
right-wing environmentalists seem to merely address concrete
environmental issues from their ideological point of view. Yet as
mentioned (it is important to emphasize the dynamic and elastic
potential of environmentalism) these differences donât prevent a
transfer of ideas between groups whose ideological frontiers have
historically been porous.
Indeed, political ideas are always open to resignification and
reappropriation (this is, as mentioned, the methodological premise of
this article), and environmentalism is becoming a great example of it.
For instance, some neofascists find inspiration in apocalyptic
perspectives described by authors that are far from being radical
rightists, such as Paul Ehrlich.133 Ehrlich (who was also influenced by
neo-Malthusianism) stated that overpopulation was leading the human race
to mass starvation and all kinds of social distresses and eventually put
the focus on mass immigration.134 As with some of Petti Linkolaâs
eliminationist ideas, Ehrlichâs could influence ecofascism as a
pessimism booster, but he will fail to become part of the solutions this
ideology proposes. This is because, as we have already pointed, out
ecofascism (and more broadly fascism itself) is a utopian ideology that,
in the face of a terrible sense of decay and hopelessness, proposes a
nationalist palingenesis. Therefore it can feed on demographic anxieties
and environmental fears, but it wonât embrace any nihilistic âsolutionâ
inasmuch as its pessimistic mindset is limited to criticizing the world
it seeks to overcome; it cannot (logically) permeate its transformative
political project. [End Page 114]
Environmentalism has also intersected with market-oriented ideologies
associated with laissez-faire economics that have little to do with
neoecofascism. Such is the case of what might be called
econeoliberalism, i.e., the branch of neoliberalism that sees
environmental problems as a product of state intervention. Their
solution is in the hands of consumers and entrepreneurs. Erik Swyngedouw
refers to econeoliberalism as âthe privatization of climateâ whereby
âthe field of neoliberal economy is widened.â135 Economists such as
Robert Costanza and Monica Grasso, for example, refer to the environment
in utilitarian and economistic terms such as âeco-system services,â
ânatural capital stocks,â or âthe economic value of the planet,â and
advocate for market-oriented reforms of our relationship with nature.136
Such views can be found in important international organizations such as
the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the United Nations.
For example, in 2008 the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)
launched its âGlobal Green New Deal,â a set of proposals that underlined
the importance of technological innovation, micro-credits,
liberalization, and economic growth.137
Right-wing environmentalist stances in the United States have found
another niche beyond political organizations and ecologist clubs:
terrorism. Right-wing terrorism accounts for the majority of attacks
that took place within the country in the last decade138 and an
important number of them were inspired by environmentalist positions.
This was the case of Patrick Cursius, the author of the El Paso shooting
of August 2019, who in his manifesto (posted on 8chan, a website
frequented by alt-righters and other supporters of the radical right)
showed concerns for the environment and blamed immigrants and âurban
sprawlingâ139 for climate change. The Christchurch shooter, who was an
inspiration for Cursius, went further and directly defined himself as an
ecofascist in his manifesto.140
Both were partly inspired by a book that has become a sort of Bible for
the contemporary Western radical right: The Great Replacement (Le grand
remplacement) by Renaud Camus. In this book Camus warns about the fact
that white European people are being consciously replaced by immigrants
in order to create a more compliant population consisting of replaceable
individuals lacking any national or ethnic identity.141 This conspiracy
theory (which is far from being groundbreaking as a radical right idea)
is based mainly on demographic anxieties, but it includes ecological
concerns as well,142 which has led Clément Gutern to speak of écologie
intĂ©grale143 (integral ecology, [End Page 115] as in âintegral
nationalismâ, the ideology developed by Charles Maurras) inasmuch as
there is an integration of social, demographic, national, ethnic and
environmental concerns.
But the most notorious example of right-wing environmentalist
inspiration for terrorist attacks is undoubtedly Ted Kaczynski, better
known as Unabomber, the author of several attacks between 1978 and 1995.
Kaczynskiâs manifesto, Industrial Society and Its Future, is a harsh
critique against industrialism and leftism that echoes several
environmentalist views and fears that were present in late
nineteenth-century Germany. In it Kaczynski also criticizes feminism and
technological progress.144 It is curious that he was influenced in part
by left-wing intellectuals such as Herbert Marcuse and Jacques Ellul.
Kaczynskiâs work has become âone of the most well-known rhetorical
artifacts endorsing environmental extremism,â145 and he is today praised
in Alt-Right circles.146 His ideas are difficult to classify, for he
held an eclectic approach to environmental issues, but he remains part
of the radical right, an ideological family in which, as this article
has shown, different and often contradictory stances can coexist.
Although today it represents a marginal political current, neoecofascism
is likely to become increasingly important in the coming years or
decades, like other forms of right-wing environmentalism. This is
because environmentalism is already developing into a meta-ideology, at
least in Western countries. Here we use Andrew Heywoodâs definition of
meta-ideology as âa body of ideas that lays down the grounds upon which
political and ideological debate can take place.â147 This implies that
environmental stances are likely to be part of practically every
ideological position in the near future in one way or another, to the
extent one can foresee. Therefore, rather than a confrontation between
environmentalists and antienvironmentalists, what may lie ahead is an
encounter between competing environmentalisms.
This polymorphous aspect of environmentalism is why it is important to
differentiate between the various forms of right-wing environmentalism
in order to avoid overusing neoecofascism, as has always been the case
with âfascism.â At the moment, the ecofascist revival cannot be
considered [End Page 116] a well-articulated ideology, but this doesnât
imply that it doesnât have the potential to become one. Letâs not forget
that German ecofascism only became a consistent worldview after the
First World War, following decades of ideology building and
contradictory moves.
The conditions in which ecofascism thrived at the beginning of the
twentieth century (e.g., the spread of romantic ideas, nationalism,
ecoanxiety, environmental distress, xenophobia) are alive and well
today, even if the romantic impulse has lost momentum. Moreover, the
West is witnessing a series of nationalist turns that can potentially
normalize or legitimize radical ideas that were taboo until recently,
and the economic and geopolitical prospects for the future do not invite
us to imagine a stable political landscape. Neoecofascists have to face
tremendous political and cultural obstacles, but they also have a
historic opportunity to reinvigorate a series of ideas that can connect
with highly contemporary issues. It is difficult to predict how things
will be in the future, but one thing is for certain: neoecofascism, in a
more or less residual way, will be part of it.
1. Ernst Lehmann, Biologischer Wille: Wege und Ziele biologischer Arbeit
im neuen Reich (Munich: Zentralverlag der NSDAP, 1934), 10â11.
2. Richard B. Spencer, âWhat It Means to Be Alt-Right. A meta-political
manifesto for the Alt-Right movement,â AltRight, 11 August 2017,
http://archive.fo/vuZGm (accessed 7 October 2019).
3. Janet Biehl and Peter Staudenmaier, Ecofascismo: Lecciones sobre la
experiencia alemana (Barcelona: Virus Editorial, 2019), 48.
4. Ernesto Laclau, On Populist Reason (London: Verso, 2005), 86â87.
5. Biehl and Staudenmaier, Ecofascismo, 54.
6. Thomas J. Main, The Rise of the Alt-Right (Washington, DC: Brookings
Institution Press, 2018), 2.
7. Frederick C. Beiser, El imperativo romĂĄntico: El primer romanticismo
alemĂĄn (Madrid: Sequitur, 2018), 64.
8. Isaiah Berlin, The Roots of Romanticism (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 2013), 107.
9. Tim Blanning, The Romantic Revolution (London: Penguin Random House,
2010), 8.
10. Zygmunt Bauman, Modernity and the Holocaust (Cambridge: Polity
Press, 1991).
11. Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer, Dialectic of the Enlightenment:
Philosophical Fragments (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2002).
12. Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism: The Sense of a Beginning under
Mussolini and Hitler (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 52.
13. Emilio Gentile, âFascism, Totalitarianism and Political Religion:
Definitions and Critical Reflections on Criticism of an Interpretation,â
Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 5, no. 3 (2004): 326â75.
14. George L. Mosse, The Fascist Revolution: Towards a General Theory of
Fascism (New York: Howard Fertig, 1999), 32.
15. Zeev Sternhell, El nacimiento de la ideologĂa fascista (Madrid:
Siglo XXI, 1994), 6
16. Stanley G. Payne, A History of Fascism, 1914â1945 (Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1995), 35
17. Robert Paxton, Anatomy of Fascism (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2004),
17.
18. Biehl and Staudenmaier, Ecofascismo, 15.
19. Isaiah Berlin, The Roots of Romanticism, 95.
20. George L. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich: La
crise de lâidĂ©ologie allemande (Paris: Seuil, 2008), 24.
21. RaphaĂ«l Cahen and Thomas Lanwehrlen, âDe Johann Gottfried Herder a
Benedict Anderson: retour sur quelques conceptions savantes de la
nation,â Sens Public, 2010, www.sens-public.org/article794.html
(accessed 7 October 2019).
22. Federico Chabod, Lâidea di nazione (Bari, Italy: Editori Laterza,
2008), 68â74.
23. Alessandro Campi, NaciĂłn. Historia de una idea y de un mito polĂtico
(Madrid: Sequitur, 2019), 183.
24. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 42.
25. Robert Cecil, The Myth of the Master Race: Alfred Rosenberg and Nazi
Ideology (New York: Dodd, 1972), 165.
26. Beiser, El imperativo romĂĄntico, 65.
27. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 198.
28. Ibid., 69.
29. Tim Cloudsley, âRomanticism and the Industrial Revolution in
Britain,â History of European Ideas 12, no. 5, (1990): 611â35.
30. Biehl and Staudenmaier, Ecofascismo, 16.
31. Klaus Vondung and Stephen D. Ricks, The Apocalypse in Germany
(Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2000), 112.
32. Amy Standen, âMeine Grune Nation,â Ecology Center, 15 July 2006,
https://ecologycenter.org/terrainmagazine/summer-2006/meine-grune-nation/
(accessed 8 October 2019).
33. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 71.
34. Ibid., 20.
35. Beiser, El imperativo romĂĄntico, 127.
36. Robert A. Pois, National Socialism and the Religion of Nature
(London: Croom Helm, 1986), 25.
37. Biehl and Staudenmaier, Ecofascismo, 26.
38. Franz-Josef BrĂŒggemeier, Mark Cioc, and Thomas Zeller, (Eds.), How
Green Were the Nazis? Nature, Environment and Nation in the Third Reich
(Athens: Ohio University Press, 2005), 7.
39. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 55.
40. Ibid.
41. Guy Tourlamain, Völkisch Writers and National Socialism: A Study of
Right-Wing Political Culture in Germany, 1890â1960 (Bern, Switzerland:
Peter Lang, 2014), 4.
42. Ibid., 39.
43. Steven E. Aschheim, The Nietzsche Legacy in Germany: 1890â1990
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994), 113â14
44. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 45.
45. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism,
and the Politics of Identity (New York: New York University Press,
2003), 52
46. John P. Jackson, Jr., and Nadine M. Weidman, âThe Origins of
Scientific Racism,â Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, nÂș 50
(Winter, 2005/2006), Vol.8 : 66â79
47. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 294.
48. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, The Occult Roots of Nazism: Secret Aryan
Cults and their Influence in Nazi Ideology (London: TPP, 2004), 33.
49. Mosse, Les racines intellectuelles du TroisiĂšme Reich, 75
50. Ibid., 385.
51. Heather Pringle, The Master Plan: Himmlerâs Scholars and the
Holocaust (New York: HarperCollins, 2011), 40.
52. David Patterson, Anti-Semitism and its Metaphysical Origins (New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2015), 137â38.
53. Biehl and Staudenmaier, Ecofascismo, 43.
54. Ibid., 47.
55. Frank Uekötter, âGreen Nazis? Reassessing the Environmental History
of Nazi Germany,â German Studies Review 30, no. 2 (2007): 267â87.
56. RubĂ©n DomĂnguez MĂ©ndez, âLa batalla del grano y los valores del
ruralismo,â La RazĂłn HistĂłrica: Revista hispanoamericana de Historia de
las Ideas 22 (2013): 36â47.
57. Anna Bramwell, Ecology in the 20th Century: A History (New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1989), 51.
58. Walter Laqueur, Fascism, Past, Present and Future (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1997), 93.
59. Roger Griffin, âThe Palingenetic Core of Generic Fascist Ideology,â
in Alessandro Campi (Ed.), Che cosâĂš il fascismo? Interpretazioni e
prospettive di ricerche (Rome: Ideazione Editrice, 2003), 97â122.
60. âFrom Alt Right to Alt Lite: Naming the Hate,â ADL, 16 June 2016,
https://www.adl.org/resources/backgrounders/from-alt-right-to-alt-lite-naming-the-hate
(accessed 8 October 2019).
61. Main, The Rise of the Alt-Right, 115.
62. Ibid., 3.
63. Ibid., 4.
64. Alice Marwick and Rebecca Lewis, Media Manipulation and
Disinformation Online (New York: Data & Society, 2018), 11.
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