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Title: Anti-Fascism Against Machismo Author: Petronella Lee Date: October 3, 2019 Language: en Topics: anti-fascism, feminism Source: https://north-shore.info/2019/10/03/anti-fascism-beyond-machismo/
âItâs a naturalized, state-sanctioned, normalized and deepening fascism,
whose waves of violence seem to measure the strides of a giant⊠So here
this question is key: What do we mean when we speak of feminism?
Feminism cannot be defined at the surface levelâŠItâs a struggle that is
only renewed by restoring the historical memory of our women fighters,
those who have been forgotten in the dustbins of revolutions⊠We cannot
think of a feminism, an anti-patriarchy, without anti-capitalism,
without anti-fascism, without anti-racism and without class
struggleâŠ.â[1]
In the spring of 2017, a video of an anti-fascist being beaten at a
counter demonstration in Berkley went viral. The video depicted counter
protestor Louise Rosealma being punched in the face and knocked to the
ground by white supremacist and founder of Identity Evropa, Nathan
Damigo. On social media, in major news articles, and within movement
circles, the video was the subject of extensive commentary. This
incident and the various reactions to it tell us much about our current
moment. It reveals that we are living through a time where alt-right,
white nationalist, and neo-nazi forces are gaining momentum and becoming
emboldened. As the video circulated, the response of the far-right laid
bare the depth of their misogyny and vividly illustrated the extent to
which patriarchal ideology is a key component of their politics. Louise
was doxed and viciously denigrated online â her personal information
including home address and phone number was widely distributed and her
career as a sex worker was publicised. She was called disgusting and a
whore, and was inundated with both rape and death threats. Photos of her
being punched, as well as photos taken from her work in porn became the
backdrop for a plethora of memes appearing on both the internet and the
streets. For example on the streets of Berkley, oversized posters
appeared showing Louiseâs naked body beside Damigoâs smiling face with
the text âIâd hit thatâ written across.[2] Her attack and violence
against women in general, was promoted and celebrated. Others chimed in
on the video and their responses were equally revealing.
The reaction of liberal feminists was predictably disappointing and
highlighted the many shortcomings of their political project. Some
speculated about whether or not the attack would have happened under
Hilary. Others, framed Louise as a victim and in many cases as
non-violent. Narratives circulated claiming she was attacked while
attempting to deescalate and prevent the violence of others, or was
attacked unprovoked while peacefully protesting. A gendered pacifism was
implied, and violence was presented as something done to Louise (as a
woman), but not something that Louise (as a woman) could or would do.
Hand-in-hand with these claims, were calls for police involvement and
the arrest of Damigo. In the typical style of carceral feminism,
increased policing, criminalization, and incarceration were proposed as
the appropriate response to the incident. Reactions coming from the left
werenât much better, and exposed the sexism ingrained in anti-fascist
politics. Posts, photos, and memes covering the incident were highly
patronizing and critiqued Damigo on the basis that he was a coward for
hitting a woman (assumed to weaker and less of a threat). Despite a long
history of women putting their bodies on the line to fight fascism,
physical confrontation was implicitly presented as the realm of men.
Even in supposedly progressive circles, the popular image of the
anti-fascist is a male body; often a white male body that borrows
heavily from the aesthetics of antifa movements in Europe. Based in a
tacit denial of womenâs agency, conversations about Louise became a
matter of identity (of her being a woman), rather than a matter of
politics or activity. Last and certainly not least, this incident and
the fact that it got so much attention speaks to the deep-seated racism
that underlines both the left and the right. Women get attacked all the
time, white supremacists beat women all of the time, and women of colour
disproportionately face the brunt of it. Louiseâs experience went viral
and garnered such broad interest undoubtedly because she is a white,
conventionally attractive cis-woman.
The far-right has been on the rise and over the course of the last
several years their ideas have been gaining traction. First at the level
of grassroots politics, and now more and more at the level of
institutional politics, far-right ideology has a notable foothold. It
isnât only that far- right movements have grown, but further, that
far-right ideas from the margins have seeped into the mainstream. The
situation is bleak, but not hopeless. We have to know our enemy and we
have a lot of work to do; however, many of the options presented to us
can be found lacking. Weâre given the choice between a pacifying liberal
feminism of âpussy hatsâ and âprotective policing,â or a reductive
anti-fascism defined by machismo and sexism. Against such a backdrop,
this article seeks to examine the gendered dimensions of fascist
movements and anti-fascist struggle, as well as to consider the
possibilities for an anti-fascism rooted in revolutionary feminism. For
the purpose of this article, I use the term fascism/fascist broadly to
refer to a complicated and diverse phenomenon that includes a plethora
of far-right groups, ideologies, and movements, including white
nationalists, neo-Nazis, ultra-patriots, the alternative right,
identitarians, and traditionalists, amongst others.[3] The article is
divided into three distinct, yet interrelated parts, intended to cover
the politics, practices, and histories of fascism, gender, and militant
resistance. Part 1 explores the gender politics of fascism today, Part 2
examines the history of womenâs participation in anti-fascist
resistance, and Part 3 concludes with a consideration of the challenges
and prospects for developing an explicitly feminist anti-fascism.
Fascist Sexisms
âFascism, then, is an exacerbation, a more militant extension, of the
patriarchal relationships between men and women that have persisted for
centuries. It is a worsening of the fantasies, the violence, the
misshapen desires that the whole system of gender relationships that
have long pertained in European societies and those in the new world
that are descended from them. Rather than a thing, which is
categorically distinct from other social and political systems, fascism
is a process, which can easily recur, and wherein we can see men, and
groups of men, who have commenced the journey.â[4]
Following the death of Heather Heyer in Charlottesville, an organizer of
the Unite the Right event commented that Heather was a âfat, disgusting,
communistâ and her death was âpayback.â[5] In a similar vein, comments
were posted online celebrating her murder and calling her a âuseless
slutâ on the grounds that âa 32-year old woman without children is a
burden on society and has no value.â[6] Beyond being attacked for her
anti-fascist politics, Heather was attacked for being a woman. At the
2018 Womenâs March in Seattle, posters exclaiming âMake women property
againâ made an appearance.[7] During this same time at a similar march
in Providence, members of the white nationalist group Vanguard America
showed up with a banner reading âFeminists Deserve The Rope.â[8] On
International Womenâs Day, an article on a popular neo-nazi website
proposed that an âInternational Burn a Witch Dayâ and an âInternational
Shame a THOT Dayâ be celebrated as âitâs only fair that we reward AND
punish.â[9] Only a few years earlier at an International Womenâs Day
celebration in Sweden, neo-Nazis attacked the crowd and seriously
injured five women.[10] More recently, in Santiago this past July a
feminist march in support of free and legal abortion in Chile was
attacked by the fascist group the Social Patriotic Movement. Several
hundred members of the group â infamous for describing feminists as
animals and arguing for their sterilization â attempted to block the
march and in the process covered the streets in animal blood, physically
attacked the demonstrators, and stabbed three women.[11] Such examples
are seemingly endless.
Incidents such as these are taking place with growing frequency, as
those on the far- right increasingly decry the role of feminism in
propagating âCultural Marxismâ and destroying âWestern
Civilization.â[12] Echoing the idea promoted in Nazi Germany that
womenâs emancipation âwould destroy the German race and lead to the
introduction of Bolshevism,â feminism (and women) are still the
enemy.[13] Then, as in now, patriarchy is fundamental to fascism. Taking
this assertion as a starting point, this section focuses on where and
how the question of gender fits into fascism. To do so, I explore the
rise of the Alt-Right, examine the differing perspectives on gender and
sexuality found on the contemporary far-right and finally, consider the
role of the âwhite women victimâ trope in propping up white supremacy.
The current resurgence and proliferation of far-right movements in North
America has frequently been linked to the rise of the Alt-Right. Short
for the alternative right, the Alt-Right can be understood as a loosely
organized collection of ideological tendencies, groups, podcasts,
websites, think-tanks, and figureheads that have created a new breed of
white supremacy. It takes inspiration from the identarian ideas of the
European New Right and is tied together by âa contempt for both liberal
multiculturalism and mainstream conservatismâ[14] and a âtrenchant
opposition to all socio-economic, cultural, and political propositions
based on egalitarianism and collectivity.â[15] While it is best known
for its politics of white nationalism and antisemitism, politics of
misogyny are also formative. Patriarchal ideology fundamentally shapes
the Alt-Right and misogyny is undoubtedly one of its central
pillars.[16] The Alt-Right advocates not only for white supremacy, but
more specifically for white male supremacy.[17] Sexism rather racism, is
the gateway drug that has led many to join the Alt-Right.[18] Romano
explains: âThe basic idea that âwomen are getting too out of handâ is
the patriarchal common denominator. And it aligns perfectly with male
rage against âsocial justiceâ activism, which in turn paves the way for
white nationalism and white supremacy to gain a foothold.â[19] To
understand this dynamic, it is useful to look at some of the precursors
to the Alt-Right movement.
Countless observers have linked the Alt-Right to the so-called âthe
Manosphere,â arguing that the Alt-Right arose in part from and continues
to be closely intertwined.[20] Emerging in and around the 2010s, the
manosphere is most simply defined as âan online antifeminist male
subculture that has grown rapidly in recent years, largely outside of
traditional right-wingâ circles.[21] It entails a disparate network of
websites, internet forums, blogs, and videos that focus on menâs issues,
share a chauvinistic orientation, and are united by an emphasis on male
victimhood. Those involved speak out against the tyranny of SJWs (social
justice warriors) and PC (politically correct) culture, and condemn
feminism, along with other equity seeking movements as instigators of
societal decline. The manosphere first entered the public limelight in
2014 with the âGamergateâ controversy, in which a large online campaign
was undertaken against a number of women who worked in the video game
industry and had spoken out against sexism. Supporters of Gamergate
claimed that the campaign was about defending free speech and fighting
for journalistic ethics, however, in practice the campaign marked a
blatant attack against women in the industry. In the words of one
researcher: âThis campaign took the diffuse online harassment of women
and sharpened it into coordinated attacks against specific women, who
faced stream of misogynistic invective, rape, and death threats, and
doxing.â[22] This event was a harbinger of things to come, foreshadowing
the rise of the Alt-Right and offering a glimpse into the future.[23]
Indeed, the tactics forged by Gamergaters such as online harassment,
targeted abuse, and doxing, were picked up by the Alt-Right and have
become a common tool of the far- right.[24]
The manosphere universe is comprised of a variety of different and
overlapping circles, including MRAs, PUAs, MGTOWs, and INCELs. The first
of which, Menâs Rights Activists (MRAs) assert that the legal system,
media, and society at large unfairly discriminate against men. They talk
of misandry, argue that men (and not women) are oppressed and otherwise
disadvantaged, and advocate on a number of different issues such as
suicide, domestic abuse, and child custody. The metaphor of âthe red
pillâ is central; evoked to describe oneâs awakening to the dark truths
of our world such as âfeminism is toxic, sexism is fake, men have it
harder than women, and everything the media teaches about relationships
is a lie.â[25] Paul Elam, founder of the influential MRA website A Voice
for Men has promoted beating women[26] and infamously commented âthere
are a lot of women who get pummeled and pumped because they are stupid
(and often arrogant) enough to walk through life with the equivalent of
a IâM A STUPID, CONNIVING BITCH â PLEASE RAPE ME neon sign glowing above
their empty little narcissistic heads.â[27] Their vitriolic hatred of
women is undeniable.
Moving to the next category, Pickup Artists (PUAs) focus on helping men
learn how to pick-up women and manipulate them into having sex. They
talk about âthe game,â are obsessed with the notion of an alpha/beta
male hierarchy, and advocate a predatory sexuality based on asserting
dominance.[28] One of their best known figures, Daryush Valizadeh who
writes under the name Roosh V on the PUA website Return of Kings has
argued for the legalization of rape on private property.[29] In May
2014, Elliot Rodger injured 14 and killed 6 at the University of
California where he hoped to âslaughter every single spoiled, stuck-up
blond slut.â[30] His manifesto stated amongst other things that PUA
forums had confirmed his theories âabout how wicked and degenerate women
really are.â[31] The garbage continues and next we have Men Going Their
Own Way (MGTOWs). MGTOWs are basically male separatists â they choose to
avoid relationships with women altogether as a âprotest against a
culture destroyed by feminism.â[32] Websites like MGTOW.com, advocate
menâs independence from women, argue for the importance of male
preservation, and discuss the fight of modern man to protect his
sovereignty. Their writings are âpeppered with references to a âbitchâ
who will cheat, leave, use you for your moneyâ and discussions of how
âwomen will either trick them into raising children that arenât theirs,
get pregnant intentionally in order to trap them, or falsely accuse them
of rape.â[33] Essentially, women are viewed as degenerate and
untrustworthy sluts programmed to ruin menâs lives.
Finally, Involuntary Celibates (INCELs) are a subculture of primarily
young men who identify as involuntarily celibate. Influenced by a sense
of unfulfilled sexual entitlement, they speak of swallowing the âblack
pillâ[34] and conceptualize their condition â defined by the absence of
romantic or sexual relationships â as immutable. Sparrow explains:
âIncels understand biology as destiny. They regard themselves as losers
in lifeâs genetic lottery. Theyâre self-described betas, condemned by
their faces and physiques to perpetual isolation while women (whom they
deride as âStacysâ) seek out the muscular, handsome males (known in the
incel lexicon as âChadsâ).â[35] While some amount of blame is placed on
other men, incels primarily hold women responsible for their misery. As
a result, they denigrate women online, discuss the best ways to punish
them, and in some cases advocate mass rape, maiming, and murder.[36] In
Spring 2018, Alek Minassian drove a van into a crowd of pedestrians in
Toronto killing 10 people, 8 of whom were women.[37] Hours before the
attack, he made a post on Facebook celebrating the âIncel Rebellion.â In
the after math of the incident, Jordan Peterson (psychology professor
and darling of the Right) insisted that such acts of violence are what
happens when men do not have partners. To address this issue, Peterson
and his followers suggest enforced monogamy as the rational solution to
redistribute sex and prevent single men from committing mass
violence.[38]
These various online communities and the different patriarchal
orientations they represent, have led many insecure, marginalized, and
otherwise struggling men to broader fascistic politics. They function to
create a culture united in the belief that white male masculinity is
under attack and the status of men must be protected at all costs. In
the context of changes in capitalism and the organization of labour,
coupled with various cultural-political changes said to favour women and
âminorities,â more and more men are embracing the far- right. Reflecting
on this reality, Bromma attests:
âMillions of men are losing âtheirâ women, and âtheirâ jobs, and itâs
driving them crazy⊠The anger of male dispossession fuels reactionary
populist, fundamentalist and fascist trends in every part of the world.
These right-wing movements are typically led by men of the middle
classes, furious at losing the privileges they held under the previous
male capitalist order. But millions of poor and de-classed men are
joining in, forming a kind of united front of misogyny.â[39]
In what has been referred to as the âMRA-to-white-nationalist-pipelineâ
men concerned with the demise of patriarchal culture and their declining
material conditions in general, are seduced by white supremacist thought
and xenophobic ideas. As a result, they come to embrace white
nationalism and advocate the vision of âan ethnically cleansed futureâ
that is âhostile to female power.â[40] Misogyny plants the seeds of
fascism and operates as a stepping stone to the larger movement.
They have learned the dark truths of the world, but unlike other groups
belonging to the manosphere who set out to challenge and change that
reality, incels see their situation as fundamentally unchangeable. Their
situation and more broadly their life, is hopeless.
White supremacist movements have always been entangled with misogyny. As
Spencer notes, their understanding of âracial hierarchy is intimately
tied up with other social hierarchies.â[41] That said, although
virtually all fascists are anti-feminist, their views on gender and
sexuality are not monolithic. In the words of one researcher: âAll far
rightists promote male dominance, but the kinds of male dominance they
promote differ enormously.â[42] There is much disagreement and frequent
debate on the topic within the far-right. Speaking to the place of
women, some argue for the complete banishment of women from the public
sphere, while others argue that (white) women have a role to play in the
white nationalist movement. On the topic of homosexuality, some argue
for the extermination of all queers, while others argue for (and even
celebrate) the inclusion of openly gay men. There is no consensus and
substantial tensions exist. Before mapping out some of these tensions,
it is useful to note the points of agreement that unite the far-right in
regards to the question of gender.
Despite extensive disagreement, there a number of general ideas on which
almost all agree. Some of the most common include: 1) gender
essentialism; 2) gender difference; and 3) gender hierarchy. First and
foremost is the idea of essentialism, understood as âthe view that
anything, creature, or person has an essential nature that categorically
defines it, materially and/or spiritually.â[43] Gender, like race, is
essential â it is a biologically determined fact that defines the
essence of a person and shapes everything from ability to intelligence
to motivations to vices to human worth. It is an universal category that
is not socially constructed, but the unchangeable product of nature.[44]
Based on this understanding, the second shared idea is that of binary
gender and specific gender roles. Gender is conceptualized as binary and
rigid. One is born either a man or a woman, and this inescapably
dictates oneâs place in the world. Each gender comes with a unique set
of innate traits and predetermined characteristics, and as such, men are
suited to specific roles and women to others. It is worth highlighting
that this position translates to agreement on opposing the notion of
gender as non-binary, and thus, agreement on opposing (and frequently
enacting violence against) genderqueer and trans people. In general, the
far-right shares revulsion for trans people, and a particular hostility
for transwomen who âare seen as men who reject their natural roles and
privileges and âvoluntarilyâ become the hated other.â[45] Lastly, the
third shared idea concerns gender hierarchy and inequality. Gender is
necessarily viewed as a hierarchy. It is not only that men and women are
fundamentally different, but that men are fundamentally superior to
women. Inequality between men and women is the product of biology and a
fact of nature â some genders, some races, some abilities, and some
sexualities are simply inferior. In sum, gender is determined by nature,
gender differences are immutable, and a clear gender hierarchy where men
dominate and rule exists (and is desirable). These ideas are the basis
upon which the gender ideology of the far-right is built.
Drawing on these guiding threads, a number of different orientations
emerge. In his study of misogyny and right-wing movements, Lyon suggests
that all far-right positions on gender draw on four ideological themes â
patriarchal traditionalism, demographic nationalism, male bonding
through warfare, and quasi feminism.[46] As part of this framework,
patriarchal traditionalism is most frequently formulated in religious
terms, promotes rigid traditional gender roles, and emphasizes the
nuclear family as the mechanism for male control over women.[47]
Demographic nationalism is primarily concerned with reproduction. It is
often connected to the fear that a nation or race isnât reproducing fast
enough and/or that the stock is declining in quality (e.g. through
racial mixing), and declares that womenâs main duty to the nation or
race âis to have lots of babies.â[48] Male bonding through warfare is
also referred to as the cult of male comradeship, and it âemphasizes
warfare (hardship, risk of death, shared acts of violence and killing)
as the basis for deep emotional and spiritual ties between men.â[49]
Historically associated with war in the trenches, it is today more
commonly associated with street-fighting and militias. It sees physical
confrontation as the most important aspect of life â the foundation upon
which everything is built. Activities related to physicality are thus
prioritized and celebrated above all others. Since women are and will
always be non-combatants, they have little to no value. Lastly,
quasi-feminism advocates specific rights for women, although not
equality, and promotes âan expanded political role for women while
accepting menâs overall dominance.â[50] Movements may draw heavily on a
single theme or a mixture of several, and this may or may not change
over time.
As part of this âwarring visions of patriarchyâ [51], the approaches
taken by far-right groups can be conceptualized as falling into one of
two distinct categories â what I am going to refer to as patriarchal
fascism and misogynistic fascism. In the category of patriarchal fascism
women are considered inferior, but useful, and they have a role or
particular roles to play in the white supremacist movement. This
approach is exemplified by the infamous âFourteen Words.â Described as
the most popular white supremacist slogan in world, âFourteen Wordsâ is
typically written in one of two variations: âWe must secure the
existence of our people and a future for white childrenâ or âBecause the
beauty of the White Aryan woman must not perish from the earth.â[52] In
both versions women are valued, as mothers, as symbols of beauty, and as
protectors of the future. This orientation has a long legacy. Throughout
the 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan actively recruited women and combined white
supremacy with a âspecific, gendered notion of the preservation of
family life and womenâs rights.â[53] They criticized inequality amongst
whites, and promoted the âspecial mission of Klanswomenâ to protect
âpure womanhoodâ and the home.[54] In Germany, the Nazi Party had a
womenâs wing â The National Socialist Womenâs League. According to Nazis
ideology, women belonged to three areas of activity âKinder, KĂŒche,
Kircheâ (children, kitchen, and church).[55] Womenâs roles were highly
restricted, however, they were also highly regarded. Mothers were seen
as fighting a battle for the nation and âaccorded with the same
honourable status as the soldier.â[56]
Turning to our contemporary moment, this legacy continues. Coming to
prominence in the 1980s, the neo-nazi group White Aryan Resistance (WAR)
created the affiliate group Aryan Womenâs League (AWL). It denounced the
feminist movement as a Jewish conspiracy, while arguing that women had
subordinate, but complimentary roles to play in the race war.[57] The
largest neo-nazi organization in the United States, The National
Socialist Movement has a specific Womenâs Division.[58] Another example,
Women for Aryan Unity was founded in the 1990s and has chapters in
several continents. They call for the reinvention of feminism âwith the
parameters of Race and Revolution,â and urge women to develop both
domestic and survivalist skills in order to take care of home life and
be ready to take up arms if their men require it.[59] Self-proclaimed
western chauvinists, The Proud Boys have as one of their central tenets
âvenerate the housewife.â They argue that âwomen are equal but
different,â interpreted to mean men go to work and women stay at
home.[60] Women cannot join The Proud Boys, however, they can join The
Proud Boys Girls â a supporting group comprised of âthe wives,
girlfriends, and cheerleadersâ of The Proud Boys.[61]
While the above examples are far from progressive, they are also far
from being the worst. Over the course of the last decade, the
far-rightâs engagement with âthe woman questionâ has taken an even
darker turn. Well-known commentator on the manosphere David Futrelle,
elaborates:
ââŠlike many traditionalists, Hitler and his fellow Nazis tempered their
misogyny â or at least tried to make it seem more palatable â with
praise for the supposed purity and womanly honor of Aryan women who fit
themselves neatly into their restricted roles. Todayâs neo- Nazis, or at
least those whoâve come to Nazism through 4chan and the meme wars of the
alt-right, have a much darker view of women, one influenced more by
bitter misogyny of âRed Pillâ pickup artists and Men Going Their Own Way
than by sentimental fantasies of âKinder, KĂŒche, Kircheâ.â[62]
Going beyond traditional claims about the sanctity of the family and
natural gender roles, many contemporary groups influenced by the
Alt-Right promote an intensely misogynistic ideology that straight-up
hates women. They have largely abandoned the idea that âwomen have
important, dignified roles to play as mothers and homemakersâ to promote
the message âthat women as a group are contemptible, pathetic creatures
not worthy of respect.â[63] For instance, menâs rights activist and
white nationalist F. Roger Devlin refers to women as the new âwhite
manâs burden,â arguing that traditional visions of marriage and the
family âdid not oppress women enoughâ and should be replaced with âa
vision of absolute servility.â[64] This is the realm of misogynistic
fascism â women are not only inferior, but useless, and they have little
to no role to play in the white nationalist movement. Examples of this
orientation are terrifyingly ample.
Renown white supremacist website The Daily Stormer[65] has banned women
from contributing to site, virulently argues against their inclusion in
anything, and has come into conflict with women associated with the
older white supremacist website Stormfront.[66] At several rallies in
the last year, crowds of white nationalists could be found chanting
âwhite sharia now.â[67] Promoted by some on the far-right, the idea of
âwhite shariaâ proposes that in a future white ethnostate âthe
sexuality, reproduction, daily life, and right to consent of White women
should be controlled by White men.â[68] In a video promoting the idea,
one proponent asserts: âUnder âwhite shariaâ our women will no longer be
permitted to live their lives as slutsâŠAnd you wonât have any career
women invading your workplace either. Nope. Under âwhite shariaâ our
women wonât even be able to leave the home without being escorted by a
male family member.â[69] Many defenders of the concept also advocate
making abortions forbidden for white women, and mandatory for women of
colour.[70] Equally vile, members of the militant Atomwaffen Division
encourage the rape of white women as a tool to force the birth of more
white babies[71], and promote the rape of non-white women as a tool to
terrorise by forcing âthem to carry around the spawn of their master and
enemy.â[72] Beyond such obvious suspects, this particular orientation to
women in far-right politics takes some less expected turns.
Under the umbrella of misogynist fascism, there exists a strain
specifically defined by a queer misogyny. This subsection, referred to
by Kirchick as âhomofascismâ is comprised of aggressively sexist and
generally hypermasculine gay men who literally have no use for
women.[73] As mentioned earlier, the far-rightâs position on sexuality
is somewhat complicated. On the one hand, LGBTQ rights are seen as a
sign of social degeneration, Jewish influence, and an attack on white
society.[74] In response, it is not uncommon to see âopen calls for the
expulsion or violent eradication of LGBT+ people.â[75] On the other
hand, when speaking specifically of the âhomosexual questionâ things are
much less clear cut. Nazi Germany rounded up and slaughtered homosexuals
by the tens of thousands, yet, it is also common knowledge that there
were gay Nazis. The most famous being Ernst Röhm, a high-ranking
official and head of the Nazi Partyâs paramilitary force (the SA). Along
with Hitler, Röhm was a âfounding father of Nazismâ[76] and his
particular brand fascism âwas identical to the Naziâs Partyâs ideology
in almost all respects, save on questions of male-male eroticism.â[77]
Under Röhm, homosexuality was highly regarded in the SA where âthey
promoted an aggressive, hypermasculine form of homosexuality, condemning
âhysterical women of both sexesâ in reference to feminine gay men.â[78]
They celebrated ancient warrior cults and frequently referenced the
Greek tradition of sending gay soldiers, who were believed to be the
most fierce fighters into battle.[79] In the 1980s, an explicitly gay
neo-nazi skinhead movement emerged in the UK.[80] In the late 1990s, the
American Resistance Corps (ARC) was founded in North America with the
goal of uniting gay and straight skinheads to create âa new era of
tolerance and compassion between racist heterosexuals and homosexuals in
their war against non-whites.â[81]
Looking to our current period, some on the far-right simply do not care
about male sexuality one way or another. For instance, editor-in-chief
of the influential Counter Currents Publishing Greg Johnson argues:
âWhite Nationalism is for the interests of whites and against the
interests of our racial enemies. Period. Anything else is beside the
point.â[82] Similarly, the infamous alt-right figurehead Richard Spencer
insists that homosexuality is a non-issue â something that has been part
of European societies for millennia and isnât âsomething to get worked
up about.â[83] Against this backdrop, several openly gay figures and the
ideas they promote have gained some traction on the far-right. A
featured writer on several alt-right websites and author of a number of
books, James J. OâMeara is best known for his book The Homo and The
Negro.[84] In the book, OâMeara makes the argument âthat gay white men
represent the best of what Western culture has to offer because of their
âintelligenceâ and âbeautyâ, and that âNegroesâ represent the worst,
being incapable of achievement.â[85] He insists that homosexuality is
quintessential to Western Civilization and promotes gay participation in
fascist movements.[86] OâMeara and others like him, advocate a future in
line with the classic Aryan fantasy of the MĂ€nnerbund. Associated with
male warrior tribes and homoeroticism, the concept celebrates the unique
bonds between men and speaks to a social order where elite bands of men
rule.[87] Male dominance is central and the fundamental building block
of society isnât the church or family, but close-knit groups of
organized men.
Arguably the most infamous of this camp, self-described
âanarcho-fascistâ Jack Donovan promotes a blend of white nationalism,
gang masculinity, and androphilia (love or sex between masculine
men).[88] He calls for the establishment of a tribal order called âThe
Brotherhoodâ â an order that is comprised of men who swear an oath to
each other and is based on âthe way of the gangâ understood as a life
centered âon fighting, hierarchy, and drawing the perimeter against
outsiders.â[89] Utilizing violence, gangs of white men are to create
decentralized âhomelands/autonomous zonesâ marked by racially defined
borders and the exclusion of (white)women from public life.[90] Donovan
is a prominent member of the neo-fascist cadre organization The Wolves
of Vinland. Inspired by the theories of the late Italian philosopher
Julius Evola, the group promotes a particularly anti-populist and
anti-woman take on fascism.[91] They prioritize physical fitness and
fight training, and argue that the solution to western decline is âa
return of heroic masculine warrior-kings.â[92] All of these groups and
figures advocate a politics defined by extreme hyper-masculinity based
in an almost pathological veneration of âmanlinessâ and a distain for
femininity. They reject gay culture for its association with decadence
and hate effeminate men as much as they hate women.
Beyond understanding the contemporary far-rightâs varying positions on
women, it is furthermore valuable to consider the ways in which women as
a generic symbol and white women in particular are used as a tool to
promote and further white supremacy. Hand-in-hand with the far-rightâs
condemnation of feminism, comes the condemnation of immigration and a
particular disdain for black and indigenous women. Combined they
represent the core dangers threatening Western Civilization and white
nationhood. In a somewhat contradictory dynamic, as groups advocate
âputting women in their placeâ they simultaneously express concern for
womenâs safety from supposedly dangerous black and brown men. For
example, it is common for anti-immigrant arguments to be framed in terms
of the threat migrant men â who are discussed as violent and/or as
rapists â pose to âtheir women.â Founded in Finland and now with
chapters across Europe and North America, the far-right vigilante group
Soldiers of Odin exists for the avowed purpose of conducting street
patrols to keep women safe from refugees with a propensity to rape.[93]
Since taking over the White House, Donald Trump has frequently invoked
the threat of âMexico sending rapistsâ to justify increased border
security and stricter immigration policy.[94] Such claims are not unique
to discussion of migrant men alone, but pop up frequently in discussion
of homegrown non-white men as well. In 2017, when white supremacist
Dylann Roof opened fire and massacred nine black churchgoers at a prayer
service in Charleston, he reportedly exclaimed: âYou rape our women, and
youâre taking over our country, and you have to go.â[95] Calls to defend
(white) women from the threat of the barbaric âotherâ play a critical
role in upholding the white supremacist project.
The image of the âwhite woman victimâ who must be protected is
frequently employed by reactionary forces to whip up hysteria and
justify vehemently racist actions. This classic image âimplicitly calls
out to white men to defend âtheir womenâ and their nation, indeed,
whiteness itself.â[96] White womanâs bodies â understood as central to
the reproduction of race and nation â become symbols to be fought for
and these symbols become powerful tools of propaganda.
Discourses of safety and appeals to patriarchal ideals of womanhood are
invoked to construct the figure of the vulnerable (white) woman under
attack from the dangerous (racialized) other. This dynamic functions to
produce and reproduce particular race and gender formations, as well as
to establish and enforce a particular vision of white nationhood. As
Keskienen notes: âGender and sexuality have not only been by-products of
colonial and racial encounters, but essential for their
(re)structuring.â[97] The trope of the âbarbaric dark-skinned rapistâ â
of black and brown men as sexual predators who target white women â has
been a key tool in upholding racial hierarchies and carrying out white
supremacist politics. From the colonization of North America to
lynchings in the United States to xenophobic attacks in Europe and much
else, calls to defend women have been used to incite racialized violence
and establish incredibly racist policy. A brief look into this history
is telling.
The stereotype of âthe black bruteâ and the threat of âthe black rapistâ
are fundamental to the history of white supremacy in America. The idea
of the black brute was drawn on to contribute to justifications for
slavery, while the myth of the black rapist was âa political inventionâ
cultivated to promote a âstrategy of racist terrorâ to keep âthe Negroâ
in check following emancipation.[98] The myth of the black rapist,
complimented by the continued rape of black women, helped to assure the
ongoing domination and exploitation of black people.[99] In the
aftermath of the Civil War, the claim that black men were sexual
predators was used as pretext for murder and mob violence. Lynching came
to be rationalized âas a method to avenge Black menâs assaultâs on white
Southern womanhood.â[100] According to Angela Davis, the myth functioned
to both demonize black men and thus legitimize contempt for them, as
well as to exalt white men and excuse their brutality. She explains: âIn
a society where male supremacy was all-pervasive, men who were motivated
by their duty to defend their women could be excused of any excesses
they might commit. That their motive was sublime was able justification
for the resulting barbarities.â[101] It is worth noting that as the myth
gained traction âformer proponents of Black equality became increasingly
afraid to associate themselves with Black peopleâs struggle for
liberationâ and by the end of the nineteenth century many white women,
including leading suffragists, âpublicly vilified Black men for their
alleged attacks on white women.â[102] There is a long legacy of white
womenâs complicity in propping up racist narratives that have very real
consequences, and this not just a matter of the distance past.
At first glance, calls for safety â things like calls for safe spaces or
safe neighbourhoods â sound harmless enough. Almost everyone desires to
feel safe. However, within the context of a society defined by racial
domination (institutional and interpersonal racism), calls for safety
often draw on and act to perpetuate racist tropes (e.g. âthe black
thug,â âthe dangerous black manâ etc.) and frequently go hand in hand
with actions and/or policies that enact racialized violence. Wang
elaborates:
âWhen considering safety, we fail to ask the critical questions about
the co-constitutive relationship between safety and violence. We need to
consider the extent to which racial violence is the unspoken and
necessary underside of security, particularly white security. Safety
requires the removal and containment of people deemed to be threats.
White civil society has a psychic investment in the erasure and
abjection of bodies that they project hostile feels onto, which allows
them peace of mind amidst the state of perpetual violence.â[103]
Looking at the history of the feminist movement against sexual violence,
Wang observes that calls for the safety of women were answered with the
expansion of a racialized penal state. Drawing on the age-old trope of
the black male rapist, appeals to ensure womenâs safety acted to
sanction the expansion of the police and the prison system as the state
came to be presented and positioned as the protector of women (almost
always conceptualized as white women).
Through the process of raising awareness about violence and fighting for
aggressive sex crime prosecution, feminists inadvertently aided in the
creation of a tough on crime model of policing and punishment that
reflects the racism of the society from which it came; a society in
which the black male is almost always conceived of as a threat.
Similarly to the function of the anti-black myths in North American
history, anti- indigenous tropes have played an equally influential
role. The convergence of racialized rape narratives and white-nation
building is also integral to history of colonialization and indigenous
genocide in North America. Ideas of âthe savage indianâ and ânative
sexual perversionâ were essential to the colonial imagination.[104]
These myths, combined with notions of European superiority and the
righteousness of âcivilizing missionsâ were used to justify war against
indigenous nations, the theft of native land and resources, and the
decimation of native communities. Popular captivity narratives spread
stories about the abduction and barbaric treatment of white women by
violent, lust driven native men. These stories, along with other
writings, helped to solidify the image of Native men as wanton savages
and promote the idea that â both Native and white women have to be
protected from Indian men.â[105] In addition to providing a rationale
for appropriation and assimilation, Nagel notes that stories of âIndian
depredations and savagery also became a means of justifying white
misbehaviour and atrocities and provided opportunities for white
self-aggrandizement.â[106]
More recently, the trope of âthe immigrant rapist,â âthe barbaric
refugee,â and âthe Muslim extremistâ have been central to cries to close
the borders and save the (white) nation. Examining the refugee crisis in
Europe, Carroll observes that those on the right have drawn on the myth
of the immigrant rapist âto call for the closing of the borders as a way
to protect white, European women against the dangerous, brown men who
are coming to Europe seeking asylum.â[107] In addition to impacting
state policy, such myths produce grassroots backlash. Last year, Italian
and Polish neo-nazi groups announced that they were joining forces to
launch patrols of European beaches in order to âprotect women and
children from migrantsâ in the face of a âmuslim invasion.â[108] The
Quebec based ultra-nationalist group La Meute, claims it âwas founded
for the protection of our women from religious fundamentalismâ and
routinely patrols sections of the Canada-US looking for âillegal
refugees.â[109] Calls to protect white women are used to justify
everything from border policy to vigilante violence to the formation of
white- nationalist paramilitary organizations.
Following a related logic, in their fight against migrants (particularly
Muslims) some on the right have begun to publicly advocate for the
safety of LGBTQ people. Calls to protect queers from the threat of
Islamic extremists/gay-hating Muslims have been employed in an attempt
to spread anti-immigrant sentiment and appeal to a different
demographic. Shortly after the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando,
white-nationalist and explicit homophobe Butch Leghorn called on right
movements to take advantage of the event. Writing on the alt-right
website The Right Stuff, Leghorn argued: âThis shooting is a very
valuable wedge issueâŠWe simply need to hammer this issueâŠDrive this
wedge. Smash their coalition. Make it cool to be anti-Muslim because
Liberalism.â[110] Over the past year, âgay prideâ marches that go almost
exclusively through Muslim neighbourhoods have been organized by
fascists in France, Sweden, and the UK.[111] Their calls to protect
women, just like their calls to protect LGBTQ people, is of course
disingenuous.They hate women and queers, but calls for their protection
are a politically useful mechanism. Under these circumstances, Faye
aptly notes that the task of feminist and queer liberation âcannot be
merely sexual or gendered, but it must also be sharply critical of its
alignment with whiteness as a system of persecution.â[112] This is not
just a matter of being aware of opportunistic white-nationalists
duplicity using calls for LGTBQ safety to further their vile agenda, but
also of critically evaluating the ways in which queer movements
themselves buttress and reinforce white supremacy.
In regards to this responsibility, it is worthwhile to keep in mind that
the LGBTQ movement like the feminist movement, has a history of pushing
for safety in a manner than has had violent consequences for others.
Examining the history of the LGBTQ movement in the United States,
Hanhardt observes that appeals to safety have had racialized
consequences. Since the 1970s, activist responses to anti-LGBTQ violence
have taken one of two forms: the establishment of protected gay
territories and the identification of anti-LGBTQ violence as a criminal
category. Rooted in the implicit assumption that white gays need to be
protected from violent (often read as black) criminals, these two
approaches have led to gentrification and mass incarceration â both of
which disproportionally impact and devastate black communities. Hanhardt
explains:
âMessy distinctions between crime and violence, safety and justice,
underscore the flexibility of concepts such as risk and their centrality
to the politics of development. Here risk is simultaneously the value of
speculative capital (real estate) and the justification for crime
control (bad neighbourhoods), the ever-present threat to gay autonomy
(violence), and symptom of irresponsibility (the designation âat
riskâ).â[113]
Calls for the creation of safe spaces came to be interpreted as calls
for state violence in the form of criminalization and privatization, and
through this process, became inextricably linked to spatial development
and crime control strategies that play out along race and class lines.
Thereâs a lot that needs to be challenged and much organizing to be
done, and knowing the nuanced ins and outs of the forces we face is
advantageous. Given that misogyny is a foundational element of
contemporary far-right politics, it is valuable to know its specific
role and function. This, however, is only one piece of the puzzle and it
is useful to consider other things. As we strive to challenge the rise
of the fascism, it is worth looking back to the anti-fascist resistance
that came before us.
Anti-Fascist Resistance
âThe past does not pass; the dead are not dead, for they continue to
move us todayâŠThese ghosts have not risen simply to be put to rest, but
to speak in the manner for which they were killed; some of them must be
battled anew in our hearts.â[114]
For as long as there has been fascism, there has been anti-fascist
resistance, and from its origins onwards to our present moment, women
and queers have been active participants. However, these histories are
routinely glossed over and while there has been much talk of our
âgrandfatherâs anti-fascismâ there is much less said about the
anti-fascism of our grandmothers. Speaking to the politics of
anti-fascist history, Richet notes: âMost of the sources of the history
of antifascism deal with the political space occupied by men. This is
the case of the fascist sources built on the assumption that women could
not be autonomous political subjects. It is also the case of the sources
collected by the antifascist groups whose male leadership shared similar
assumptions.â[115] This has an impact on anti-fascism in our present
moment. When people think about or hear the term anti-fascist, the image
most likely to pop into their head is not CeCe McDonald[116] or an armed
partisan women, but a generic anti-racist skinhead dude or perhaps the
anti-fascist man as depicted in classic propaganda posters with rifle,
sickle, and hammer in hand. Against such trends, this section considers
the gendering of history and explores womenâs participation in
antifascist resistance during the first half of the twentieth century.
The intention is not to provide an exhaustive account, but to provide a
snapshot of a history too frequently forgotten and in the process,
challenge the dominant image of the anti-fascist hero. To the extent to
which such an image holds a certain pervasiveness, it acts only to
hinder actions and limit possibilities.
The stories and more importantly, the histories we tell matter â they
frame events, contextualize theory, and situate agential subjects.
Anti-fascism and anti-fascist history is not gender neutral, or race or
class neutral for that matter. Gender plays a huge role in how we think
about anti- fascism and how its history is commonly told. The history of
anti-fascist struggle is depicted as the history of great moments and
even greater men. It is a history of the heroic and necessarily male
subjects who dared to back fight against the behemoth of fascism. If
women or queers do appear in these histories, they are predominantly
presented as secondary characters â as minor participants, romantic
partners, or bystanders. In the realm of revolutionary history, there is
a long legacy of womenâs activities being dismissed as: a)
personal/private/ home matters (e.g. breads riots, various feminist
campaigns, and even the march that sparked the Russian Revolution etc.
framed as home issues, but not disciplined politics); or b) an
irrational/ emotional matter (e.g. they act from eruptions of emotions,
and thus are inclined to spontaneity, but not organized politics).
Womenâs involvement in explicitly political movements in the public
sphere, as well as the day-to-day support, reproductive, and behind the
scenes work they perform in the private sphere, is simply
disregarded.[117] Specific figures and activities are glorified and
romanticized, while others are neglected and downplayed.
This common approach to history leads to the erasure of particular
experiences, the loss of whole histories, and beyond that, a skewed and
inaccurate picture. The creation and dissemination of accounts of
radical history shape our collective political imagination, and
influences the events and actions thought to be desirable (and even
possible). They convey specific ideas about who counts as history, what
counts as history, and by default, what counts as political work and who
can be a political actor. In sum, histories frequently present a
hierarchy of who and what matters, and when the accounts are
particularly gendered (and thus exclusionary) they stand in the way of
challenging a fascist threat steeped in misogyny. As a result, it is
important to look to the margins of history and seek out alternative
accounts.
As already mentioned, women, femmes, and queers have been active
participants in anti-fascist struggles for as long as there has been
fascism. Their involvement is as diverse as it is extensive, and any
attempt at a comprehensive telling is beyond the scope of this piece of
writing. With this in mind, I take a narrow and inevitably limited
approach to presenting anti-fascist history. While the histories of
anti-fascist women and queers frequently dovetail, they are also
different things and it would be impossible to cover both. The vibrant
legacy of queers against fascism is a history in its own right.[118]
Thus, this section focuses exclusively on women. It draws on a small
sampling of case studies from Europe, Africa, and North America to
examine womenâs resistance to the rise of fascism following the First
World War. [119] Contrary to popular notions, women were involved in all
aspects of the historical fight against fascism. Feminist historian
Ingrid Strobl elaborates: âThey were activists in urban brigades, the
ghetto underground, and partisan units. They printed and distributed the
illegal press; they forged papers; they transported weapons and
themselves participated in arm actions. They organized underground
movements and ghetto uprisings; they were political cadres and military
commanders of groups.â[120] To explore this further, it is instructive
to look at resistance in Ethiopia, Spain, and Yugoslavia. As of 1934,
Ethiopia was one of just two African countries that had not been
colonized by Europe.[121] Unfortunately, this was not to last and in
October of 1935 Mussoliniâs forces invaded Ethiopia. After capturing the
capital the following year, Mussolini declared Ethiopia part of the
Italian Empire and ushered in a period of fascist occupation. Resistance
to the occupation, to fascism and to colonialism, commenced immediately
and lasted until Italy was expelled in 1941. From the beginning, women
participated in the struggle in large numbers and fulfilled many
critical roles. Reflecting on this period, historian Aregawi Berhe
contends that womenâs participation was crucial, arguing that while it
is difficult to assess their military contribution âtheir supplementary
support activities, spying and sabotage actions in some instances were
decisive.â[122] During the occupation, the Ethiopian Womenâs Volunteer
Service Association (EWVSA) was turned into âa clandestine movement of
resistance.â[123] Women who were part of the association engaged in a
diversity of activities, ranging from supplying those fighting in the
field with clothes, food, bandages, and ammunition, to providing
shelter, forging important documents, producing propaganda, and
gathering intelligence.[124] Some women became camp- followers, women
who travelled to the front and took care of maintaining weapons, as well
as feeding and providing medical care to those engaged in fighting.[125]
Other women fraternized with Italian soldiers, and artfully engaged in
deception to further the struggle. Women took Italian soldiers,
including high-ranking officers, as lovers to build a false sense of
trust and gain access to information and materials. With a relationship
established, women took the opportunity to steal arms and it was not
uncommon for these women to kill their lovers in order to do so.[126]
Such relationships were used as a tool of sabotage as well, after
pretending be a defector and declaring their allegiance to fascism,
women would supply their lover with false information and point the
Italians in the wrong direction.[127] Women took Italian lovers, found
employment as domestic servants, or ran drinking houses to gather
intelligence and collective sensitive information, such as the location
of arms and munition depots or plans for upcoming offensives.[128] In
addition to these roles, women were also actively involved in the
military aspect of the struggle. Some women became guerilla fighters and
fought on the battlefield, and some even led fighters and planned
military operations. Although wars in Ethiopia were predominantly fought
by men, women were not entirely excluded from warfare.[129] For
instance, in circumstances where a wife or daughter â in the absence of
a male successor â inherited a familyâs land and weapons âthey were
expected to perform the duties attached to the land and weapons, whether
or not the duty was military or administrative.â[130] Thus, it was not
unheard of for women to play leading military roles. In this context, a
handful of women from prominent families led their own armies, and many
more from all rungs of society, took up arms and joined the guerilla
war.[131]
The anti-fascist/anti-colonial struggle in Ethiopia caused ripples far
beyond its borders. In the United States, Mussoliniâs invasion sparked
protests, riots, and solidarity campaigns throughout the country.
Massive demonstrations took place in New York and Chicago, street fights
broke out between black anti-fascists and Italian pro-fascists, pickets
were held outside of the Italian consulate, leaflets were distributed,
dock workers refused to load Italian ships, and fundraising drives were
organized.[132] Black Communists set up the Joint Committee for the
Defence of Ethiopia and along with other Pan-African groups spearheaded
the activities.[133] Crabapple notes, âblack Americans recognized the
dangers of Fascism abroad earlyâŠThey saw Mussoliniâs Blackshirts
reflected in the white hoods of the Klan, and Hitlerâs Jew-baiting
mirrored by the systemic violence of Jim Crow.â[134] Women in the
American Communist Party spoke out against the threat fascism posed to
womenâs rights and with the invasion of Ethiopia sought to develop a
cross-racial alliance to build class-solidarity against fascism, and
with varying degrees of success, worked with black organizations to
build support for Ethiopia.[135] In Britain, black rights and
anti-colonial activists formed the International African Friends of
Abyssinia (IAFA) to promote resistance to fascism in Ethiopia.[136]
Black radicals in America, Britain, and elsewhere, drew connections
between the fight for Ethiopia and their experiences, as well as put
fourth analysis of anti-fascism rooted in black internationalism,
anti-colonialism, and anti-imperialism.[137] Several members of the
Abraham Lincoln Brigade6 came to Spain as a result of their activism in
support of Ethiopia. For example, Salaria Kea â the only black women in
the Brigade â fundraised for Ethiopian hospitals and when her
application to join the Ethiopian army was rejected, she sailed for
Spain.[138]
In July of 1936, General Francisco Franco initiated a military rebellion
against Spainâs republican government. The instigators anticipated a
swift victory. However, the coup dâetat was met with a spontaneous
uprising and Spain was thrown into civil war. In many of the besieged
cities, everyday civilians raided local armories, requisitioned weapons,
and took up arms to fight against the fascists. During these early days
of popular resistance, women took part in the storming of barracks to
obtain weapons, built barricades, and participated in armed street
fighting.[139] Beyond a fight against fascism, the Spanish Civil War was
also a highly contested fight for revolution. Anarchists and dissident
Marxists sought to combine the anti-fascist fight with the fight for
broader revolutionary change, while communists and socialists rejected
such positions, arguing for the necessity of engaging in the war
exclusively in terms of anti-fascism. This conflict led to what Nash
refers to as âcivil war within the civil war.â[134] In this context,
women essentially found themselves in a struggle on three fronts â
fighting against fascism, fighting to push antifascist forces towards a
revolutionary orientation, and then finally, fighting to make
revolutionary forces take seriously gender liberation. In response,
womenâs organizations were founded to aid the anti-fascist cause, while
promoting ideas of revolutionary change that included womenâs
emancipation.
Founded a few short months before the official outbreak of the civil
war, Mujeres Libres (Free Women) was an anarchist organization that
sought to contest womenâs subordination and mobilize women to take part
in the struggle against fascism. Beginning with just a few hundred
members, its numbers soared during the war reaching a membership ranging
from 20,000 to 60,000 women.[135] Members of the organization were
active in all aspects of the Civil War, from fighting on the front
lines, as well as aiding the wounded, to maintaining collective kitchens
and organizing schools for refugees and engaging in political debate.
Central to Mujeres Libres and what made them unique, was an emphasis on
organizational autonomy. The foundering members of Mujeres Libres were
all militants in the broader anarcho-syndicalist movement who âfound the
existing organizations of that movement inadequate to address the
specific problems confronting them as women, whether in the movement
itself or in the larger society.â[140] The organization was built on the
belief that women needed separate organizations to address their
specific needs and ultimately, to build their capacities to intervene
and shape the political landscape. To this end, the organization took on
a variety of initiatives, including: the publication of a regular
journal aimed at political consciousness-raising; the running of classes
to overcome illiteracy; the facilitation of discussion groups to
challenge ignorance; the opening of womenâs health clinics; and the
offering of industrial and commercial apprenticeships.[141] Political
instruction and basic education sought to help in addressing womenâs
cultural and sexual subordination, and professional training aimed to
aid women in their economic subordination by increasing employment
opportunities.
In addition to challenging womenâs subordination, the organizationâs
initiatives were aimed at recruiting women into the anti-fascist
movement and creating a conscious force of women who were prepared for
the âsocial revolution.â To build this force, the organization
emphasized two-interrelated goals and corresponding programs:
capacitaciĂłn and captaciĂłn. The first, capacitaciĂłn was concerned with
âpreparing women for revolutionary engagement.â[142] Related to the
educational and consciousness-raising activities outlined above,
capacitaciĂłn focused on the empowerment of women such that they would
feel confident in their abilities, recognize their potential, and
ultimately conceptualize âthemselves as competent historical
actors.â[143] This emphasis on personal development, individual growth,
and building capacity was the result of conceptualizing struggle not
only in quantitative terms, but also in qualitative ones. Moving to the
second, captaciĂłn was concerned with âactively incorporating them
[women] into the libertarian movement.â[144] In practice this entailed
working to increase womenâs participation in other, larger revolutionary
organizations. As Mujeres Libres worked with women to address their
everyday material needs, they created the conditions necessary to bring
more of them into the fold of revolutionary politics.
By the spring of 1941, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was occupied and
partitioned off by Axis forces. A portion of the country was occupied by
German troops, while other areas were occupied by Bulgarian, Hungarian,
and Italian troops, and Croatia was established as a Nazi puppet-state
ruled by a local fascist militia.[145] In response, a Communist led
resistance movement emerged and the National Liberation Army (NLA) was
formed.[146] From the onset and continuing for the duration of the
conflict, women played a huge part in the partisan resistance movement.
In the words of one scholar: âThe mass participation of women in the
communist-led Yugoslav Partisan resistance is one of the most remarkable
phenomena of the Second World War.â[147] Similarly, Bonfiglioli
describes womenâs contribution as âunprecedented in Europe,â explaining
that âout of a population of sixteen millionâŠ[official records] report
one hundred thousand women fighting as partisans, and two million
participating in various ways to support the National Liberation
Movement. It was been calculated that approximately twenty-five thousand
women died in battle, and some two thousand women attained officerâs
rank.â[148] While noteworthy, womenâs contribution as fighters is only
one part of a much bigger picture. Women participated in the
anti-fascist struggle in a variety of different ways. Acting
autonomously, women led food riots in face of widespread hunger caused
by the countryâs food stock being exported to the Third Reich.[149]
Otherwise disconnected, peasant women passed information to partisans on
enemy troop movements and spies, as well as harvested crops for
neighbours who were at the front or in prison.[150] In addition to
taking care of important agricultural work, many of these women also
tended to wounded partisan soldiers, took care of orphans, and housed
those on the run.[151] As part of organizations and collectives
officially connected to the resistance movement, women took on many more
roles still.
Shortly after the formation of the National Liberation Army, the
Antifascist Front of Women (AFZ) was established. A specific womenâs
organization, the AFZ was founded as an organ of Yugoslav Communist
Party and was charged with the two-fold mission of mobilizing âlarges
masses of women in the struggle against the German occupation and in
support of the combat and noncombat activities of the Liberation
Movement.â[152] Anti-fascist womenâs committees were formed in towns,
villages, and cities across the country, and members canvassed both
liberated and non-liberated territories to recruit new women into the
organization.[153] Once members, the work taken on by the women was
all-encompassing and ranged from typical gendered tasks such as sewing
and laundry, to espionage and sabotage. The women knitted socks and
sweaters, sewed uniforms, and made shoes for the troops, as well as
mended and laundered their clothes.[154] They collected food, clothing,
medical supplies, money, arms and ammunition.[155] They prepared
hideouts for partisans on the run, âlooked after the families of the
arrested and organized prison escapes.â[156] Women acted as couriers,
transporting important messages, outlawed literature, attack orders,
weapons and explosives through the country.[157] They printed
underground newspapers, published and distributed clandestine anti-
fascist journals, and ran illegal radio stations.[158] They dug up
streets to inhibit the movement of fascist tanks and served as guards in
liberated villages.[159] Women destroyed roads and rail lines, cut
telephone lines, blew up power stations and other strategic targets, and
burned enemy crops.[160] They also engaged directly at the front as
nurses, cooks, and armed fighters.[161]
Local AFZ councils ran hospitals and orphanages, set-up public kitchens,
and organized accommodations for refugees.[162] They engaged in
constructive, socially useful projects to provide much needed services
and care. In addition to building womenâs involvement in the resistance
movement, the organization operated to agitate for womenâs right and
facilitate political education.[163] The AFZ had the ârevolutionary
missionâ to help transform women into equal and deserving citizens of
the future socialist state.â[164] Specifically, this meant working to
âeliminate illiteracy among women, âraiseâ their political
consciousness, and train them professionallyâ so that they could
effectively participate in the process of building socialism.[165] To
this end, the organization carried out a comprehensive literacy campaign
offering courses that taught reading and writing in urban, as well as
rural areas.[166] Along with literacy course, the AFZ held general
education classes on topics such as hygiene and health, first-aid, and
other practical skills.[167] Special political courses were offered for
more âadvancedâ members, and covered discussions of politics, economics,
history, and culture.[168] Working in tandem with the courses, the AFZ
released publications âwhich, besides being tools for the dissemination
of propaganda, featured educational pieces and political texts in a
simple, accessible language.â[169] This is a limited account â a small
handful of examples from a much larger history. Nonetheless, these
examples are powerful and offer lessons, inspiration, and other
takeaways for anti-fascist resistance in our present moment. To explore
this further, the next section considers some of the key insights that
can be garnered from these histories.
â We conspire; we breathe together. We share what we have been gifted to
us by those who came before us. We attempt to walk beside each other.
But what will we carry over with us past the emancipatory horizons weâll
approach together? What histories will inform our collective actions?
What energies of solidarity and creativity will animate these
movements.â[170]
Invoking the history of womenâs participation in anti-fascism, a number
of lessons can be drawn and carried into our current moment. While the
uncritical introduction of organizing models and ideas from other places
and times is problematic, it can be useful to draw inspiration and take
insights from elsewhere. History certainly does not hold all of the
answers, but it can be a place (one amongst many) to start. Akemo and
Busk discussing anarchism, insist that building âan anarchist feminist
historical tradition will give us a platform to advance our own
politics, understand our work in the context of what has already been
done, and then forge aheadâŠWe have always existed, but we have not
always been seen.â[171] The same can be said for an anti- fascist
feminist historical tradition. With this in mind, I propose seven
general insights that can be teased out from the history of womenâs
anti-fascist resistance and applied to contemporary anti-fascist
struggles. These are not intended to be universal or prescriptive, but
merely contextual and suggestive.
First, conceptualize anti-fascist resistance broadly and engage in
multi-layered struggle. Embrace a variety of organizing strategies and
tactics, and move away from the tendency to look at anti-fascist
struggle in terms of a hierarchical ranking in which certain forms of
activity (e.g. combat/fighting, involvement in formal political
organizations etc.) are placed at the top, and all other forms of
activity are seen as secondary and less important. Anti-fascist
resistance isnât just one thing. It involves a lot of different types of
activities, and requires a diversity of things. Describing the range of
activities that anti-fascists historically engaged in, Bravo notes that
while armed resistance and the ideal of a âyoung, healthy, tough, and
preferably maleâ body were disproportionality glorified, there was also
space for unarmed resistance where âthe human frame was far less
strictly definedâ and âone could be old, weak, physically inept, sickly,
and still useful and not excluded.â[172] Resistance was lived everyday
by many different bodies, from those who took up arms and fought Nazis
to those who engaged in sabotage, to those who aided clandestine
activities to those who fed and clothed those resisting. It involved
both formal and informal involvement, as well as individual and
collective actions. It took place in both the public and the private
sphere, included physical confrontation, public education, labour and
community organizing, surveillance and information gathering, the
building of infrastructure, and so much more. Building on the first, the
second insight is related to the task of building anti-fascist political
culture. Calls to develop a âphysical culture of class combatâ[173] or
to form âultrasâ football supporter clubs[174] are fine, but
limited.[175] If we want to develop a strong resistance movement, we
cannot focus almost exclusively on physical activities and/or
traditionally male- dominated spaces.[176] Itâs important to have
spaces, roles, and activities that account for the variety and diversity
of social life â for example considering things like ability and age.
Historically, there existed a wide range of anti-fascist cultural
spaces. These included things like reading groups, social clubs,
collective kitchens, daycare centres, workplace organizations, and
sports associations.
Thirdly, the next insight concerns the propensity to associate
particular types of activity with particular types of bodies. Against
the tendency to associate women with passivity and non-violence, it is
crucial to recognize that combative politics is not exclusively the
domain of men. Throughout the history of anti-fascist resistance and
continuing today, women, queers, and trans folks have been involved in
armed uprisings, self-defence initiatives, physical confrontations,
coordinated attacks, and various other forms of violent activity.
Critiquing such actions as inherently male and exclusionary to all
others, marginalizes the diverse voices of those engaged in
confrontational tactics, and furthermore, perpetuates restrictive gender
stereotypes. That said, it is also true that anti-fascism has issues
with sexism and patriarchal behaviour, and âthat whenever confrontation
is part of the repertoire, it is an extra concern.â[177] Which leads to
the fourth insight, couple anti-fascist politics with feminism and
conceptualize gender liberation as a non-negotiable component of
anti-fascism. This means centering gender considerations, taking trans
politics and queer struggle seriously, and not treating these things as
peripheral concerns. Relatedly, the fifth insight concerns the value of
autonomy and autonomous organizing. Creating autonomous spaces and/or
pushing for organizational autonomy was crucial to many historical
anti-fascist groups. Many women found themselves in a situation where
they were fighting against fascism and fighting for revolutionary
change, all the while pushing their movements to take gender oppression
seriously. To address this layered struggle, women founded separate
organizations to undertake the work that was otherwise brushed off.
Sixth, look to and draw on other anti-racist and anti-colonial
resistance traditions and not just those most commonly associated with
anti-fascism. Popular accounts of anti-fascist history privilege Europe
and disproportionately focus on white actors. The proto-typical
anti-fascist hero is presented not only as male, but as white, ignoring
all other histories. There is an incredibly long legacy of black and
indigenous struggle, however, it is often overlooked and goes
unrecognized. Jegroo notes: âWhile many people think of white
anarchistsâŠpunching Nazis when they talk about antifa, Black folks in
the Western hemisphere have essentially been doing antifascist work for
centuries. It just hasnât been recognized as such.â[178] Particularly in
North America â a continent defined by settler colonialism, indigenous
genocide, and antiblackness â black liberation and decolonial movements
have either explicitly or implicitly been engaged in fighting against
fascism for hundreds of years.[179] Even though much of this work wasnât
done under the label of anti-fascist, that doesnât make it any less
relevant. These histories and their continuation today are crucial to
conceptualizing and engaging in anti-fascist struggle.
Moving to the final point, the last insight is to connect anti-fascism
with more ambitious revolutionary goals. Anti-fascism in and of itself
is a necessarily limited struggle. It is a reactive and defensive
movement that while incredibly important, is much more of a jumping off
point than a desired end-destination. In the past, many groups rooted
their anti-fascist work in a commitment to revolution and pushed for a
broader vision of collective liberation and societal transformation.
Anti-fascism wasnât a single struggle, but an overlapping set of
struggles taking place simultaneously. It was an anti-fascist war, but
also a civil war and class war fighting for sweeping social, political,
and economic change.
âPart of making anti-fascist politics stronger means contending with the
hyper-masculinity and predominant whiteness of antifa spacesâŠRather than
be dismissed as secondary issues that fall behind the primary goal of
confronting fascists, disability justice, anti-racism, and feminism
should be at the forefront of any revolutionary analysis⊠This also
means recognizing that anti-fascism is a necessary but insufficient
political solution to the problems of our time .â[180]
Misogyny is a fundamental pillar of contemporary far-right politics; it
is not just an aside. With the proliferation of far-right movements over
the last few years, and more recently with the recuperation of those
movements and their abhorrent ideas into political parties and ruling
institutions, it is crucial to understand all that we are up against.
Part of what we face is the growth of political forces shaped by
variations of intensively patriarchal ideology, and as such, forces that
aspire to establish (or rather further establish, more accurately) not
just white supremacy, but white male supremacy. This reality desperately
calls for a response â it is a growing nightmare that is all too quickly
becoming normalized and the only response is struggle. Unfortunately,
the ready-made options presented to us leave much to be desired. On one
hand, liberal feminism fundamentally lacks the teeth to address our
current political climate, leading to a dead end of permitted marches,
electoral campaigns, and âpussy hatâ politics. On the other hand,
anti-fascism is plagued by machismo, leading to a highly reductionist
understanding of struggle and the glorification hyper-masculine
activities above all else. Anti-fascism doesnât have to be that way â we
can do better.
Looking to histories of womenâs participation in anti-fascist movements,
we can see glimpses of a different anti-fascism. Contrary to the common
conception, women were involved in all forms and formations of the
historical fight against fascism. Feminist historian Ingrid Strobl
paints a vibrant picture, referencing womenâs involvement in
anti-fascist activities, she explains:
âThey were activists in urban brigades, the ghetto underground, and
partisan units. They printed and distributed the illegal press; they
forged papers; they transported weapons and themselves participated in
arm actions. They organized underground movements and ghetto uprisings;
they were political cadres and military commanders of groups. [They
engaged in sabotage].They found hiding places for Jewish children and
youth, brought them to these hiding places, provided them with clothing,
money, food, and with forged documents and encouragement over months and
sometimes years.â[181]
There is a lot of inspiration and many lessons that can be taken from
this history. This is not to say that all aspects of those histories are
applicable to our current situation â we are struggling in a vastly
different context. However, there are valuable takeaways, as were
explored above, and these takeaways offer a solid ground on which to
build an anti-fascism rooted in revolutionary feminism. Against an
anti-fascism shaped by machismo, a revolutionary feminist anti-fascism
is shaped by the concept of militancy. Before discussing the latter, it
is useful to look at the former.
There is a thread that flows through anti-fascist movements, and while
it does not exclusively define contemporary anti-fascism, it is
influential and worth noting. The thread is an orientation/attitude that
tends towards machismo. This inclination is one of bravado and dogmatic
combativity, and leads to a political position that prioritizes
confrontation while it more or less ignores (or at least downplays)
other aspects of struggle. It reproduces some of the worst
characteristics of hegemonic masculinity with a self-righteous zeal, and
considers discussion of things like sexism to be needlessly divisive and
a distraction from the âimportant things.â This strain is almost
exclusively concerned with physical conflict with fascists, where if you
arenât willing or able to âthrow down,â you arenât an anti-fascist. It
is individualistic and leans towards an orientation of doing what one
wants, regardless of the consequences. It is concerned more with the act
of the fight itself than it is with the outcome. There is no room for
nuance or any consideration of context, and strategy largely falls by
the wayside.[182] These characteristics can be described as machismo,
and an anti-fascism rooted in machismo is the political equivalent of a
bar fight â as haphazard and chaotic as it is incoherent, and often
sloppy.[183]
In contrast, an anti-fascism oriented towards militancy instead machismo
is concerned with commitment, collectivity, and effectiveness. It isnât
about image or ego; rather, it is about doing what needs to be done,
choosing the methods/tactics best suited for a situation, and looking at
the bigger liberatory picture. This approach couples anti-fascist
politics with feminism, and conceptualizes gender liberation as a
non-negotiable component of anti-fascism. Such politics starts from the
understanding that anti-fascist resistance isnât just one thing â it
involves a lot of different types of activities and a large diversity to
roles. A vibrant movement would have a place for two year old child up
to their eighty-two year old grandparent. This does not mean a move away
from street politics, confrontational tactics, or the use of violence;
it acknowledges that antagonism and conflict are inherent to
anti-fascist politics and that confrontation/violence is both necessary
and justifiable in certain circumstances. It also acknowledges that
women, queers, and trans folks often âthrow downâ and are involved in
physical alterations and other confrontational activities. Thus, there
is an emphasis on dispelling the gendered myth that only men engage in
such activities.
Beyond recognizing the role of combative politics, there is also an
emphasis on expanding the number of people who participate in
confrontational moments, and thus it puts effort into building the
comfort and capacity for more women and queers to take part in those
activities that are usually coded as hyper-masculine. While it values
these activities, an anti-fascism that is rooted in militancy rather
than machismo knows that violence is not appropriate in all situations,
and the habit of narrowly focusing on physical confrontations is
detrimental to our movements. Fighting isnât winning; thereâs a lot more
to it than that. Even in the example of street violence, thereâs more to
it than just fighting. Thereâs a lot of background work involved,
including intelligence gathering, neighbourhood organizing, logistical
planning, and legal/prison support. This work, which is usually
feminized, is as valuable as the confrontational activities it supports.
Itâs just that one type of work isnât particularly sexy and is
perpetually undervalued, while the other one is exciting and easily
glorified. A feminist anti-fascism does it all and values it all; it
knows that the unglamorous and boring work plays a quintessential part
in struggle. Of related importance, an anti-fascism rooted in militancy
considers both the qualitative and quantitative sides of struggle. This
means it isnât just concerned with how many fascist rallies it shuts
down, but also with the subjective experience and the personal
development of those involved. Ideally, people are learning skills,
developing confidence, and becoming a more capable revolutionary. Beyond
the immediate benefits, these developments will be helpful for the other
struggles moving forward. The infrastructure and abilities we build, and
the resources we develop, should be part of and put to use by broader
struggles. Our anti-fascist organizing should be grounded in
revolutionary politics, in pushing for a vision of collective
liberation, meaningful autonomy, and endless possibility. The problems
we face are so much bigger than the question of fascism, and our
aspirations should be so much more than this limited struggle.
Footnotes
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[2] CrimethInc. (2018). How Anti-Fascists Won the Battles of Berkeley â
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[3] Fekete, Liz. (2014). Anti-fascism or anti-extremism?. Race & Class,
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[4] Wilson, Jason. (2018). What do incels, fascists and terrorists have
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[5] Wilford, Greg. (2017). Heather Heyer: Charlottesville neo-Nazi rally
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[7] Cooper, Cloee. (2018). White Nationalist Groups Turn Up At 2018
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[8] Ibid.
[9] Batty, Roy. (2018). Womyn Throw Protest on International Womynâs
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[11] Black Rose/Rosa Negra. (2018). We Are Not Afraid: Chilean Feminism
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[12] Luger, Joseph. (2017). Cultural Marxism is the #1 Enemy of Western
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[13] Loroff, Nicole. (2011). Gender and Sexuality in Nazi Germany.
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[14] Lyons, Matthew N. (2017). CTRL-ALT-DELETE: The origins and ideology
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[15] Koulouris, Theodore. (2018). Online misogyny and the alternative
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[16] Sunshine, Spencer. (2017). Three Pillars of the Alt-Right: White
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[17] Lyons, Matthew N. (2017). The alt-right hates women as much as it
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[18] Romano, Aja. (2018). How the alt-rightâs sexism lures men into
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[19] Ibid.
[20] Nagle, Angela. (2017). Kill All Normies: Online culture wars from
4chan and Tumblr to Trump and the alt-right. Alresford: Zero Books.
[21] Lyons, Matthew N. (2017). CTRL-ALT-DELETE: The origins and ideology
of the Alternative Right. Political Research Associates. Retrieved from
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[22] Lyons, Matthew N. (2016). Alt-right: more misogynistic than many
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[23] Romano, Aja. (2018). How the alt-rightâs sexism lures men into
white supremacy. Vox. Retrieved from
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[24] Lees, Matt. (2016). What Gamergate should have taught us about the
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[25] Tait, Amelia. (2017). Spitting out the Red Pill: Former misogynists
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interview-how-misogyny-spreads-online.
[26] Lyons, Matthew N. (2017). CTRL-ALT-DELETE: The origins and ideology
of the Alternative Right. Political Research Associates. Retrieved from
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right/
[27] Nagle, Angela. (2017). Kill All Normies: Online culture wars from
4chan and Tumblr to Trump and the alt-right. Alresford: Zero Books. P.
91.
[28] Ibid, P. 88â89.
[29] Anonymous. (2016).The Rich Kids of Fascism: Why the Alt-Right
Didnât Start with Trump, and Wonât End With Him Either. Itâs Going Down.
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[30] DiBranco, Alex. (2017). Mobilizing Misogyny. Political Research
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[31] Ibid.
[32] Nagle, Angela. (2017). Kill All Normies: Online culture wars from
4chan and Tumblr to Trump and the alt-right. Alresford: Zero Books. P.
92.
[33] Ibid, P.92â93.
[34] Basically a more nihilistic version of the âred pill.â
[35] Sparrow, Jeff. (2018). From misery to misogyny: incels and the far
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[36] Williams, Zoe. (2018). âRaw hatredâ: why the âincelâ movement
targets and terrorises women. The Guardian. Retrieved from
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terrorises-women.
[37] Beauchamp, Zack. (2018). Incel, the misogynist ideology that
inspired the deadly Toronto attack, explained. Vox.
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[38] Bowles, Nellie. (2018). Jordan Peterson, Custodian of the
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[39] Bromma. (2012). Exodus and Reconstruction: Working Class Women at
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[40] Gais, Hannah. (2017). The Alt-Right Doesnât Know What to Do With
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[41] Sunshine, Spencer. (2017). Three Pillars of the Alt Right: White
Nationalism, Antisemitism, and Misogyny. Political Research Associates.
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[42] Lyons, Matthew N. (2015). Jack Donovan on men: a masculine
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[43] Anonymous. (2017). The Unquiet Dead: Anarchism, Fascism, and
Mythology. P.11.
[44] Burley, Shane. (2017). Fascism Today: What It Is And How To End It.
Chico: AK Press. P. 51.
[45] Ibid, P.91.
[46] Lyons, Matthew N. (2005). Notes on Women and Right-Wing Movements.
Three Way Fight. Retrieved from
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[47] Ibid.
[48] Ibid.
[49] Ibid.
[50] Lyons, Matthew N. (2015). Jack Donovan on men: a masculine
tribalism far the far right. Three Way Fight. Retrieved from
http://threewayfight.blogspot.com/2015/11/jack-donovan-on-men-masculine-tribalism.html.
[51] Smith, Jack. (2017). The women of the âalt-rightâ are speaking out
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[52] Michael, George. (2011). David Lane and the Fourteen Words.
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[53] Blee, Kathleen M. (1991). Women in the 1920sâ Ku Klux Klan
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[54] Ibid.
[55] Loroff, Nicole. (2011). Gender and Sexuality in Nazi Germany.
Constellations, 3 (1): 49â61.P.50.
[56] Ibid.
[57] Zia, Helen. (1991). White Power Women. The Washington Post.
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[58] Southern Poverty Law Center. National Socialist Movement. Retrieved
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[59] WAU. Mission Statement. Retrieved from
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[60] Cornish, Dean. (2018). Whining Men: âWeâre Blamed for Everythingâ.
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[61] Proud Boysâ Girls. Twitter. Retrieved from
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[62] Futrelle, David. âGina tinglesâ and the Elders of Zion: Do
Alt-Rightists hate women as much as they hate Jews?. We Hunted The
Mammoth. Retrieved from
www.wehuntedthemammoth.com/2017/06/14/gina-tingles-and-the-elders-
of-zion-do-alt-rightists-hate-women-as-much-as-they-hate-jews/.
[63] Lyons, Matthew N. (2016). Alt-right: more misogynistic than many
neo-Nazis. Threewayfight. Retrieved from:
http://threewayfight.blogspot.com/2016/12/alt-right-more-misogynistic-than-many.html.
[64] Gais, Hannah. (2017). The Alt-Right Doesnât Know What to Do With
White Women. The New Republic. Retrieved from
https://newrepublic.com/article/145325/alt-right-doesnt-know-white-women.
[65] Posts on the website argue things such as: women who have sex with
black men deserve âswift and rapid exterminationâ via death squads;
brown men are âderanged savagesâ who are indefensible except in cases
where they âbeat the shit out ofâ their âbitchâ girlfriends; men need
the right to beat their daughters so they donât become âdumb slutsâ; and
âwomen have become complete sociopaths that collectively deserve to be
punished and punished severely.â
[66] Lyons, Matthew N. (2017). CTRL-ALT-DELETE: The origins and ideology
of the Alternative Right. Political Research Associates. Retrieved from
https://www.politicalresearch.org/2017/01/20/ctrl-alt-delete-report-on-the-alternative-
right/. P.8.
[67] Ibid.
[68] Minkowitz, Donna. (2017). Hiding in Plain Sight: An American
Renaissance of White Nationalism. Political Research Associates.
Retrieved from
https://www.politicalresearch.org/2017/10/26/hiding-in-plain-sight-an-american-
renaissance-of-white-nationalism/.
[69] Sunshine, Spencer. (2017). Three Pillars of the Alt-Right: White
Nationalism, Antisemitism, and Misogyny. Political Research Associates.
Retrieved from
https://www.politicalresearch.org/2017/12/04/three-pillars-of-the-alt-right-
white-nationalism-antisemitism-and-misogyny/.
[70] Minkowitz, Donna. (2017). Hiding in Plain Sight: An American
Renaissance of White Nationalism. Political Research Associates.
Retrieved from
https://www.politicalresearch.org/2017/10/26/hiding-in-plain-sight-an-american-
renaissance-of-white-nationalism/.
[71] Anonymous. (2018). Leaked: A Year Inside the Failed Neo-Nazi
Traditionalist Worker Party. Unicorn Riot. Retrieved from
https://www.unicornriot.ninja/2018/leaked-a-year-inside-the-failed-neo-nazi-traditionalist-worker-party/.
[72] Thompson, A.C. (2018). Inside Atomwaffen As It Celebrates a Member
for Allegedly Killing a Gay Jewish College Student. ProPublica.
Retrieved from
https://www.propublica.org/article/atomwaffen-division-inside-white-hate-
group.
[73] Kirchick, James. (2018). A Thing for Men in Uniforms. The New York
Review of Books. Retrieved from
https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/05/14/a-thing-for-men-in-uniforms/.
[74] Bodnar, Clay. (2018). Gay men and the Alternative Right: an
overview. Hope Not Hate. Retrieved from
https://hopenothate.com/2018/04/08/gay-men-alternative-right-overview/.
[75] Ibid.
[76] Hari, Johann. (2011). The Strange, Strange Story of the Gay
Fascists. Huffington Post. Retrieved from
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/johann-hari/the-strange-strange-story_b_136697.html.
[77] Marhoefer, Laurie. (2018). Queer Fascism and the End of Gay
History. Notches. Retrieved from
http://notchesblog.com/2018/06/19/queer-fascism-and-the-end-of-gay-history/.
[78] Ibid.
[79] Ibid.
[80] Hari, Johann. (2011). The Strange, Strange Story of the Gay
Fascists. Huffington Post. Retrieved from
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/johann-hari/the-strange-strange-story_b_136697.html.
[81] Abernethy, Micheal. (2009). Oxymorons: Gay Nazi, Gay Aryan, Gay
Supremacist. Pop Matters. Retrieved from
https://www.popmatters.com/72054-oxymorons-gay-nazi-gay-aryan-gay-supremacist-2496038330.html.
[82] Bodnar, Clay. (2018). Gay men and the Alternative Right: an
overview. Hope Not Hate. Retrieved from
https://hopenothate.com/2018/04/08/gay-men-alternative-right-overview/.
[83] Ibid.
[84] NYC Antifa. (2016). New Yorkâs Alt Right (Part II). Itâs Going
Down. Retrieved from https://itsgoingdown.org/new-
yorks-alt-right-part-ii/.
[85] Minkowitz, Donna. (2017). How the Alt-Right Is Using Sex and Camp
to Attract Gay Men to Fascism. Slate. Retrieved from
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2017/06/05/how_alt_right_leaders_jack_donovan_and_james_o_meara_attr
act_gay_men_to.html.
[86] Kirchick, James. (2018). A Thing for Men in Uniforms. The New York
Review of Books. Retrieved from
https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/05/14/a-thing-for-men-in-uniforms/.
[87] OâMeara, James J. (2012). The Rebirth of the MĂ€nnerbund in Brian De
Palmaâs The Untouchables. Counter Currents Publishing. Retrieved from
https://www.counter-currents.com/2012/04/brian-de-palmas-the-
untouchables/.
[88] Lyons, Matthew N. (2015). Jack Donovan on men: a masculine
tribalism for the far right. Three Way Fight.
Retrieved Usfrom
http://threewayfight.blogspot.com/2015/11/jack-donovan-on-men-masculine-tribalism.html.
[89] Ibid.
[90] Minkowitz, Donna. (2017). How the Alt-Right Is Using Sex and Camp
to Attract Gay Men to Fascism. Slate. Retrieved from
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2017/06/05/how_alt_right_leaders_jack_donovan_and_james_o_meara_attr
act_gay_men_to.html.
[91] Rose City Antifa. (2016). The Wolves of Vinland: a Fascist
Countercultural âTribeâ in the Pacific Northwest. Rose City Antifa.
Retrieved from
https://rosecityantifa.org/articles/the-wolves-of-vinland-a-fascist-countercultural-tribe-
in-the-pacific-northwest/.
[92] Ibid.
[93] Caplan-Bricker, Nora. (2016). How a Bunch of Clowns Shut Down
Anti-Migrant Vigilantes in Finland. Slate. Retrieved from
http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2016/02/01/a_bunch_of_clowns_shut_down_anti_migrant_vigilantes_in_fin
land.html.
[94] Casares, Cindy. (2018). Trumpâs repeated use of the Mexican rapist
trope is as old (and as racist) as colonialism. NBC News. Retrieved from
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/trump-s-repeated-use-mexican-rapist-trope-
old-racist-colonialism-ncna863451.
[95] Bouie, Jamelle. (2015). The Deadly History of âTheyâre Raping Our
Women.â Slate. Retrieved from
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/history/2015/06/the_deadly_history_of_they_re_raping_our_wo
men_racists_have_long_defended.html.
[96] Johannah May, Black. (2017). When Women Bear the Nationâs Honour:
Fascism and the Woman-as-Symbol Under Trump. Revolutionary Anamnesis.
Retrieved from https://johannahmayblack.com/2017/02/03/when-women-bear-
the-nations-honour-fascism-and-the-woman-as-symbol-under-trump/.
[97] Keskinen, Suvi. (2018). The âcrisisâ of white hegemony,
neonationalist feminities and antiracist feminism. Womenâs Studies
International Forum, 69: 152â163.
[98] Davis, Angela. (1983). Women, Race & Class. New York: Random House.
P. 107â108.
[99] Ibid.
[100] Ibid.
[101] Ibid. P.109.
[102] Ibid.
[103] Wang, Jackie. (2012). Against Innocence: Race, Gender, and the
Politics of Safety. LIES: A Journal of Materialist Feminism,(1):
145â172. P.164.
[104] Smith, Andrea. (2005). Conquest: Sexual Violence and American
Indian Genocide. Durham: Duke University Press. P. 10.
[105] Ibid. P.23.
[106] Nagel, Joane. (2000). Ethnicity and Sexuality. Annual Review of
Sociology, 26: 107â133. P. 122.
[107] Carroll, Caitlin. (2017). The European Refugee Crisis and the Myth
of the Immigrant Rapist. Europe Now Journal. Retrieved from
https://www.printfriendly.com/p/g/wmsRa6.
[108] Freedom Collective. (2018). Italian and Polish neo-nazis join
forces to patrol beaches to âprotect women from migrants.â Freedom News
and Publishing. Retrieved from
https://freedomnews.org.uk/italian-and-polish-neo-nazis-
join-forces-to-patrol-beaches-to-protect-women-from-migrants/.
[109] Lafontaine, Miriam. (2017). La Meute Cancels Protest at Montreal
Mosque Friday. The Link. Retrieved from
https://thelinknewspaper.ca/article/la-meute-cancels-protest-at-montreal-mosque-friday.
[110] Minkowitz, Donna. (2017). How the Alt-Right Is Using Sex and Camp
to Attract Gay Men to Fascism. Slate. Retrieved from
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2017/06/05/how_alt_right_leaders_jack_donovan_and_james_o_meara_attr
act_gay_men_to.html.
[111] Munt, Sally R. (2018). Gay shame in geopolitical context. Cultural
Studies: 1â26.
[112] Faye, Shon. (2017). Weâre Here, Weâre Queer, Weâre Racists. Zed
Books. Retrieved from
https://www.zedbooks.net/blog/posts/were-here-were-queer-were-racists/.
[113] Hanhardt, Christine. (2013). Safe Space: Gay Neighbourhood and The
Politics of Violence. Durham: Duke University Press. P.223.
[114] Anonymous. (2017). The Unquiet Dead: Anarchism, Fascism, and
Mythology. P.7.
[115] Richet, Isabelle. (2016). Women and Antifascism: Historiographical
and Methodological Approaches. In Huge Garcia, Mercedes Yusta, Xavier
Tabet & Cristiba Climaco (Eds.), Rethinking Antifascism: History, Memory
and Politics, 1922 to Present (152â166). New York: Berghahn Books.
[116] A Black transwoman attacked by a Nazi in June 2011. McDonald and a
group of friends were confronted by another group of people spewing
racist and transphobic remarks at them. One of the women in the other
group smashed a glass in McDonaldâs face and punched her. After a fight
between the two groups broke out, the womanâs ex-boyfriend assaulted
McDonald, whose face was already bleeding from the glass, and threw her
into the street. The man, with fists clenched, began pursuing McDonald.
She quickly pulled a pair of scissors from her purse and stabbed the man
in the chest as he lunged towards her. The man died. He was later found
to have a swastika tattooed on his chest. She went to prison for 19
months of her 41-month sentence, despite having obviously defended
herself against a racist, transphobic Nazi who was threatening her life.
[117] This dynamic is made worse by the fact that there is generally
less documentation of womenâs involvement. Women were more likely to be
illiterate and thus unable to write down their ideas and experiences.
And even if they were literate, they were less likely to have the
opportunity or time to record their thoughts. Furthermore, so much of
antifascist history (at least in the period around the Second World War)
was recorded by traditional political organizations and their
leaderships, from which women were most often excluded.
[118] There are so many amazing stories. While outside of the scope of
this article, I wanted to include at least one demonstrative example.
Raad van Verzt (Resistance Council) was a group in the Dutch
anti-fascist resistance. The group was founded by the gay artist Willem
Arondeus and was comprised of many openly queer members, including the
well-known lesbian cellist Frieda Belinfante. The group engaged in a
variety of activities, but focused primarily on forging documents for
the Jewish community in Amsterdam to help them escape Nazi persecution.
While they had initial success with forging records, they eventually
encountered a problem â the forged documents could be discovered as
fakes by cross-referencing their information with the records kept in
the Amsterdam Public Records Office. In response, late one evening the
group burned the Public Records Office to the ground and in the process,
destroyed a key resource used by the Nazis to hunt Jews and other
âdegenerates.â Following this sensationalist act, the group was hotly
pursued by Nazis forces and tragically, were quickly arrested and
executed. Right before his execution, Willem Arondeus passed these final
words to his lawyer: âLet it be known that homosexuals are not cowards.â
[119] The battalion of African American volunteers who traveled to Spain
to resist fascism, and fought in the Spanish Civil War.
[120] Strobl, Ingrid. (2008). Partisanas: Women in the Armed Resistance
to Fascism and German Occupation (1936- 1945). Oakland: AK Press. P.XV.
[121] Crabapple, Molly. (2017). Hidden Fighters: Remembering Americaâs
black antifascist vanguard. The Baffler. Retried from
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/hidden-fighters-crabapple.
[122] Berhe, Aregawi. (2003). Revisiting resistance in Italian-occupied
Ethiopia: The Patriotsâ Movement (1936â1941) and the redefinition of
post-war Ethiopia. In Rethinking Resistance: Revolt and Violence in
African History. Boston: Brill. P.87â115.P.100.
[123] Ibid.
[124] Ibid.
[125] Adugna, Minale. (2001). Women and Warfare in Ethiopia.
Organization for Social Science Research in Eastern and Southern Africa.
Gender Issues Research Report Series â no.13.P.24.
[126] Ibid, P.31.
[127] Ibid, P.32.
[128] Ibid.
[129] Ibid, P.2.
[130] Ibid, P.4.
[131] Ibid, P.26.
[132] Ibid.
[133] Ibid.
[134] Ibid.
[135] Lynn, Denise. (2016). Fascism and the Family: American Communist
Womenâs Anti-fascism During the Ethiopian Invasion and Spanish Civil
War. American Communist History, 15 (2): 177â190. P.179.
[136] Srivastava, Neelam. (2006). Anti-Colonialism and the Italian Left:
Resistances to the Fascist Invasion of Ethiopia.
interventions, 8 (3): 413â429. P.427.
[137] Featherstone, David. (2013). Black Internationalism, Subaltern
Cosmopolitanism, and the Spatial Politics of Antifascism. Annals of the
Association of American Geographers, 103 (6): 1406â1420.
[138] Crabapple, Molly. (2017). Hidden Fighters: Remembering Americaâs
black antifascist vanguard. The Baffler. Retried from
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/hidden-fighters-crabapple.
[139] Lines, Lisa. (2015). Milicianas: Women in Combat in the Spanish
Civil War. Lanham: Lexington Books. P.49. 134 Nash, Mary. (1995).
Defying Male Civilization: Women in the Spanish Civil War. Denver: Arden
Press. P.63. 135 Ibid, P.78.
[140] Ackelsberg, Martha. (1991). Free women of Spain: Anarchism and the
struggle for the emancipation of women. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press. P.115.
[141] Ibid, P.135.
[142] Ibid, P.147.
[143] Ibid.
[144] Ibid.
[145] Bonfiglioli, Chiara. (2014). Womenâs Political and Social Activism
in the Early Cold War Era. Aspasia, 8:1â25.
[146] Ibid.
[147] Batinic, Jelena. (2009). Gender, Revolution, and War: The
Mobilization of Women in the Yugoslav Partisan Resistance During World
War II. Unpublished Dissertation. Submitted to the Department of
History, Stanford University. P.2.
[148] Bonfiglioli, Chiara. (2014). Womenâs Political and Social Activism
in the Early Cold War Era. Aspasia, 8:1â25. P.5.
[149] Strobl, Ingrid. (2008). Partisanas: Women in the Armed Resistance
to Fascism and German Occupation (1936- 1945). Oakland: AK Press. P. 53.
[150] Ibid. P.53â54.
[151] Ibid.
[152] Bonfiglioli, Chiara. (2014). Womenâs Political and Social Activism
in the Early Cold War Era. Aspasia, 8:1â25. P.5.
[153] Strobl, Ingrid. (2008). Partisanas: Women in the Armed Resistance
to Fascism and German Occupation (1936- 1945). Oakland: AK Press. P. 54.
[154] Batinic, Jelena. (2009). Gender, Revolution, and War: The
Mobilization of Women in the Yugoslav Partisan Resistance During World
War II. Unpublished Dissertation. Submitted to the Department of
History, Stanford University. P.126.
[155] Ibid.
[156] Strobl, Ingrid. (2008). Partisanas: Women in the Armed Resistance
to Fascism and German Occupation (1936- 1945). Oakland: AK Press. P. 54
[157] Ibid.
[158] Ibid.
[159] Ibid.
[160] Batinic, Jelena. (2009). Gender, Revolution, and War: The
Mobilization of Women in the Yugoslav Partisan Resistance During World
War II. Unpublished Dissertation. Submitted to the Department of
History, Stanford University. P.127.
[161] Ibid.
[162] Ibid, P.126.
[163] Ibid, P.128.
[164] Ibid, P.97.
[165] Ibid, P.126.
[166] Strobl, Ingrid. (2008). Partisanas: Women in the Armed Resistance
to Fascism and German Occupation (1936- 1945). Oakland: AK Press. P. 55.
[167] Ibid.
[168] Batinic, Jelena. (2009). Gender, Revolution, and War: The
Mobilization of Women in the Yugoslav Partisan Resistance During World
War II. Unpublished Dissertation. Submitted to the Department of
History, Stanford University. P.130.
[169] Ibid.
[170] Jackson, Rob. (2019). There is No Such Thing as Revolutionary
Inheritance. Louise Michel Library Project. Retrieved from
https://louisemichellibraryproject.wordpress.com/2019/02/12/there-is-no-such-thing-as-
revolutionary-inheritance/.
[171] Akemi, Romina & Busk, Bree. (2016). Breaking the Waves:
Challenging the Liberal Tendency within Anarchism.
Perspectives in Anarchist Theory. Retrieved from
https://anarchiststudies.org/perspectives/.
[172] Bravo, Anna. (2005). Armed and unarmed: struggle without weapons
in Europe and in Italy. Journal of Modern Italian Studies, 10 (4):
468â484.
[173] Seattle Ultras. (2017). Class Combat. Ultra. Retrieved from
http://www.ultra-com.org/project/class-combat/.
[174] Anonymous. (2017). On Ultras and Militant Structures. Itâs Going
Down. Retrieved from
https://itsgoingdown.org/on-ultras-and-militant-structures/.
[175] As part of this, I would also include the aggrandizement of
particular aesthetics. Itâs fine to be into a certain style or
subculture, but they can present limits. A sleek Adidas sports jacket; a
crisp Fred Perry polo shirt etc. at least in some spaces anti-fascism
has a particular European influenced aesthetic. Inherited from the white
dominated punk subcultures from which modern antifa emerged, this
aesthetic can function to hinder struggle if anti-fascism is exclusively
thought of or associated with a specific dress code. Aesthetics should
not be a stand in for, nor should it be prioritized over politics.
[176] Anti-fascist gyms are great, and anti-fascist football clubs can
be useful. But, what about an anti-fascist neighbourhood association? Or
anti-fascist story-telling time for children, or an anti-fascist food
program? Or maybe, anti-fascist day at the nail salon or an anti-fascist
roller derby league? The list could go on.
[177] Bray, Mark. (2017). The Long History of Antifa. Progressive.
Retrieved from
http://progressive.org/dispatches/the-long-history-of-antifa/.
[178] Jegroo, Ashoka. (2017). Fighting Cops and the Klan: The History
and Future of Black Antifascism. Truthout. Retrieved from
https://truthout.org/articles/fighting-cops-and-the-klan-the-history-and-future-of-black-
antifascism/.
[179] There are countless examples. Before the height of the civil
rights movement, black activists like Mabel and Robert Williams worked
to arm black people and taught them how to defend themselves against the
Ku Klux Klan. The Black Panthers held a national conference in 1969 on
anti-fascism (the National Revolutionary Conference for a United Front
Against Fascism). Many black intellectuals have theorized the role of
fascism in America, and also done much to highlight (and organize
against) police as key perpetrators of fascist violence.
[180] Editorial Committee. (2017). Building Everyday Antifascism. Upping
the Anti. Retrieved from
http://uppingtheanti.org/journal/article/19-building-everyday-anti-fascism/.
[181] Strobl, Ingrid. (2018). Partisanas: Women in the Armed Resistance
to Fascism and Germany Occupation 1936- 1945. AK Press: Oakland.
[182] For example thereâs no distinctions made between different
tendencies on the right, everyone from a self-identified neo-nazi to
christian conservatives is a fascist and must be confronted in the same
manner.
[183] I mostly mean this figuratively, but I also know lots of examples
of dudes going out drinking to the bar and purposively looking for
fascists to fight. In this case, there literally is an âanti-fascist bar
fight.â This usually this looks like men who identify as anti-fascist
getting into a bar fight with those perceived to be fascists, though
this sometimes get muddled (e.g. is the guy wearing that t-shirt of a
fascist metal band actually a fascist, or does he just like the band and
not know anything of the politics?).