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Table of Contents
Intro; Preface; Contents; Notes on Contributors; List of Figures; List of Tables; Chapter 1: Far-Right Movements in Contemporary Australia: An Introduction; References; Chapter 2: The Australian Far-Right: An International Comparison of Fringe and Conventional Politics; Introduction; FR Electoral Performance; Religions of the Right; Odinism and the Australian Far-Right; Paganism, Heathenism, and Odinism; Alexander Rud Mills and Odinism; The Odinic Rite of Australia and Mills's Legacy; Soldiers of Odin Australia; Women for Aryan Unity Australia; Extreme Right Terrorism
Christchurch Terrorist Attack, 15 March 2019Conclusion; References; Chapter 3: The Values of One Nation Voters; Introduction; The Scanlon Foundation Surveys; Social Justice; Nationalism; The Australian Political and Legal System; Immigration and Cultural Diversity; Future Expectations, Personal Trust; Relative Importance of Issues; Conclusion; References; Chapter 4: Not a Monolithic Movement: The Diverse and Shifting Messaging of Australia's Far-Right; Introduction; Theoretical Framework and Methodology; Three Ideal Types of Far-Right Groups in Victoria/Australia
Thematic Shifts over Time: Year-by-Year ChangesIslam- and Muslim-Related Themes; Crime- and Violence-Related Themes (Excluding Terrorism); Gender Diversity and Sexuality; Responding to External Events and Public Debates: Three Case Studies; The Brighton Siege (June 2017); The 2016 Moomba Festival Brawls (March 2016); The Same-Sex Marriage Debate (During the Postal Vote 12 September to 7 November 2017); Conclusions; References; Chapter 5: Far-Right Contestation in Australia: Soldiers of Odin and True Blue Crew; Introduction; Methodology; True Blue Crew; Soldiers of Odin (Australia)
Protest MasculinityDistinctive Militarised Doxa; Logos; Doxic Language of Working-Class Heroes; Narrating Islamophobia; Embodied Far-Right Doxa; Discussion; Conclusion; Postscript; References; Chapter 6: Transnationalising the Anti-public Sphere: Australian Anti-publics and Reactionary Online Media; From New Radical Right to Anti-publics; Transnationalising Anti-publics; Intersectionality on the Right; Australian Extremist Groups as Transnational Anti-publics; Conclusion: Anti-publics Beyond the Australian Context; References
Chapter 7: Hear What I Hear, See What I See: Relating Extremist Rhetoric to the Communities That Notice ItIntroduction; Researching Reception on Social Media; Some Pilot Tweets; Senator's Swansong: An Online Abuse Incident; Conclusion; References; Chapter 8: Hijacking Democracy? Spatialised Persecution and the Planning Process; Introduction; Urban Transformation, Space, and Religious Placemaking; Positioning Islam During the Mosque Conflict in Bendigo; Spatialising the Bendigo Mosque Conflict; Rejection of Nationalist Narratives by the Planning System; Thwarted Nationalist Spatial Imaginaries
Christchurch Terrorist Attack, 15 March 2019Conclusion; References; Chapter 3: The Values of One Nation Voters; Introduction; The Scanlon Foundation Surveys; Social Justice; Nationalism; The Australian Political and Legal System; Immigration and Cultural Diversity; Future Expectations, Personal Trust; Relative Importance of Issues; Conclusion; References; Chapter 4: Not a Monolithic Movement: The Diverse and Shifting Messaging of Australia's Far-Right; Introduction; Theoretical Framework and Methodology; Three Ideal Types of Far-Right Groups in Victoria/Australia
Thematic Shifts over Time: Year-by-Year ChangesIslam- and Muslim-Related Themes; Crime- and Violence-Related Themes (Excluding Terrorism); Gender Diversity and Sexuality; Responding to External Events and Public Debates: Three Case Studies; The Brighton Siege (June 2017); The 2016 Moomba Festival Brawls (March 2016); The Same-Sex Marriage Debate (During the Postal Vote 12 September to 7 November 2017); Conclusions; References; Chapter 5: Far-Right Contestation in Australia: Soldiers of Odin and True Blue Crew; Introduction; Methodology; True Blue Crew; Soldiers of Odin (Australia)
Protest MasculinityDistinctive Militarised Doxa; Logos; Doxic Language of Working-Class Heroes; Narrating Islamophobia; Embodied Far-Right Doxa; Discussion; Conclusion; Postscript; References; Chapter 6: Transnationalising the Anti-public Sphere: Australian Anti-publics and Reactionary Online Media; From New Radical Right to Anti-publics; Transnationalising Anti-publics; Intersectionality on the Right; Australian Extremist Groups as Transnational Anti-publics; Conclusion: Anti-publics Beyond the Australian Context; References
Chapter 7: Hear What I Hear, See What I See: Relating Extremist Rhetoric to the Communities That Notice ItIntroduction; Researching Reception on Social Media; Some Pilot Tweets; Senator's Swansong: An Online Abuse Incident; Conclusion; References; Chapter 8: Hijacking Democracy? Spatialised Persecution and the Planning Process; Introduction; Urban Transformation, Space, and Religious Placemaking; Positioning Islam During the Mosque Conflict in Bendigo; Spatialising the Bendigo Mosque Conflict; Rejection of Nationalist Narratives by the Planning System; Thwarted Nationalist Spatial Imaginaries