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When fascism became mainstream: the challenge of extremism in times of crisis

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When fascism became mainstream: the challenge of extremism in times of crisis . / Kallis, Aristotle Alexander.
In: Fascism, Vol. 4, No. 1, 04.2015, p. 1-24.

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Kallis AA. When fascism became mainstream: the challenge of extremism in times of crisis . Fascism. 2015 Apr;4(1):1-24. doi: 10.1163/22116257-00401001

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@article{12ee79422442432591ce680c5c3f277b,
title = "When fascism became mainstream: the challenge of extremism in times of crisis ",
abstract = "In the years between the two world wars a fledgling radical force that we today call {\textquoteleft}fascism{\textquoteright} was transformed from a tiny fringe movement into a dominant international political paradigm that challenged liberal {\textquoteleft}mainstream{\textquoteright} values and violently reversed decades of progressive change. Fascism{\textquoteright}s spectacular and devastating success underlined how limited, resented, and reversible the alleged liberal consensus was in large parts of Europe during the interwar years; and how much demand for radical ultranationalist and authoritarian alternatives lay just below the fragile veneer of the liberal-democratic mainstream. The worldwide economic crisis was a catalyst for, rather than the primary cause of, this transformation, revealing and legitimising strong pre-existing concerns and resentments, both among the elites and public opinion.What is the relevance of this sombre historical precedent for contemporary Europe, haunted by perceptions of unprecedented existential, economic, and identity crises? How robust is the current mainstream consensus around liberal values and what kind of challenge does the continuing popularity of the radical populist right pose for {\textquoteleft}mainstream{\textquoteright} politics and society? More importantly, even if the new radical right still commands minority – though growing – support, are some of its extreme discourses becoming normalised and embedded into the mainstream?",
keywords = "mainstream, radicalism, immigrants, Islamophobia, fascism, radical right, crisis, populism",
author = "Kallis, {Aristotle Alexander}",
year = "2015",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1163/22116257-00401001",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "1--24",
journal = "Fascism",
issn = "2211-6249",
publisher = "Brill",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - When fascism became mainstream

T2 - the challenge of extremism in times of crisis

AU - Kallis, Aristotle Alexander

PY - 2015/4

Y1 - 2015/4

N2 - In the years between the two world wars a fledgling radical force that we today call ‘fascism’ was transformed from a tiny fringe movement into a dominant international political paradigm that challenged liberal ‘mainstream’ values and violently reversed decades of progressive change. Fascism’s spectacular and devastating success underlined how limited, resented, and reversible the alleged liberal consensus was in large parts of Europe during the interwar years; and how much demand for radical ultranationalist and authoritarian alternatives lay just below the fragile veneer of the liberal-democratic mainstream. The worldwide economic crisis was a catalyst for, rather than the primary cause of, this transformation, revealing and legitimising strong pre-existing concerns and resentments, both among the elites and public opinion.What is the relevance of this sombre historical precedent for contemporary Europe, haunted by perceptions of unprecedented existential, economic, and identity crises? How robust is the current mainstream consensus around liberal values and what kind of challenge does the continuing popularity of the radical populist right pose for ‘mainstream’ politics and society? More importantly, even if the new radical right still commands minority – though growing – support, are some of its extreme discourses becoming normalised and embedded into the mainstream?

AB - In the years between the two world wars a fledgling radical force that we today call ‘fascism’ was transformed from a tiny fringe movement into a dominant international political paradigm that challenged liberal ‘mainstream’ values and violently reversed decades of progressive change. Fascism’s spectacular and devastating success underlined how limited, resented, and reversible the alleged liberal consensus was in large parts of Europe during the interwar years; and how much demand for radical ultranationalist and authoritarian alternatives lay just below the fragile veneer of the liberal-democratic mainstream. The worldwide economic crisis was a catalyst for, rather than the primary cause of, this transformation, revealing and legitimising strong pre-existing concerns and resentments, both among the elites and public opinion.What is the relevance of this sombre historical precedent for contemporary Europe, haunted by perceptions of unprecedented existential, economic, and identity crises? How robust is the current mainstream consensus around liberal values and what kind of challenge does the continuing popularity of the radical populist right pose for ‘mainstream’ politics and society? More importantly, even if the new radical right still commands minority – though growing – support, are some of its extreme discourses becoming normalised and embedded into the mainstream?

KW - mainstream

KW - radicalism

KW - immigrants

KW - Islamophobia

KW - fascism

KW - radical right

KW - crisis

KW - populism

U2 - 10.1163/22116257-00401001

DO - 10.1163/22116257-00401001

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

SP - 1

EP - 24

JO - Fascism

JF - Fascism

SN - 2211-6249

IS - 1

ER -