RENEWED HATE: The Place of Jews and Muslims in Contemporary White Power Thought

King takes up the ways in which advocates of white power in the US represent Muslims and Jews. He unpacks their use of anti-Semitism and Islamophobic discourses as well as the relationships between the two in their thought. His reading suggests that whereas these framings render both Muslims and Jew...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cross currents (New Rochelle, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2015-09, Vol.65 (3), p.302-310
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description King takes up the ways in which advocates of white power in the US represent Muslims and Jews. He unpacks their use of anti-Semitism and Islamophobic discourses as well as the relationships between the two in their thought. His reading suggests that whereas these framings render both Muslims and Jews existential threats conspiring to destroy the white race, Islamophobia plays a more supplemental role to anti-Semitism, which remains the dynamic center. His discussion opens with a survey of white power, offering an overview of the evolution and key elements of white power. He then turns to the place of Muslims and Jews in white power discourse.
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1939-3881
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subjects Antisemitism
Ethnic identity
Ethnicity
Islam
Islamophobia
Jewish people
Jews
Muslims
Political aspects
Portrayals
Power
Social aspects
Verbal aggression
White people
White supremacy movements
title RENEWED HATE: The Place of Jews and Muslims in Contemporary White Power Thought
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