Fascism publishes peer-reviewed articles in English, mainly but not exclusively by both seasoned researchers and postgraduates exploring the phenomenon of fascism in a comparative context and focusing on such topics as the uniqueness and generic aspects of fascism, patterns in the causal aspects/genesis of various fascisms in political, economic, social, historical, and psychological factors, their expression in art, culture, ritual and propaganda, elements of continuity between interwar and postwar fascisms, their relationship to national and cultural crisis, revolution, modernity/modernism, political religion, totalitarianism, capitalism, communism, extremism, charismatic dictatorship, patriarchy, terrorism, fundamentalism, and other phenomena related to the rise of political and social extremism.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ARTICLES
Guest Editors’ Note / Matthew Kott and Tomislav Dulić
Decentering Comparative Fascist Studies / Roger Griffin
Neither Hitler nor Quisling: The Ragnarok Circle and Oppositional National Socialism in Norway / Terje Emberland
‘Home, Religion, Fatherland’: Movements of the Radical Right in Finland / Oula Silvennoinen
Fascism by Popular Initiative: The Rise and Fall of the Vaps Movement in Estonia / Andres Kasekamp
Latvia’s Pērkonkrusts: Anti-German National Socialism in a Fascistogenic Milieu / Matthew Kott
Ikea Fascism: Metapedia and the Internationalization of Swedish Generic Fascism / Henrik Arnstad
BOOK REVIEW
In the Tracks of Breivik: Far Right Networks in Northern and Eastern Europe, edited by Mats Deland, Michael Minkenberg and Christin Mays / bookreview by Matthew Kott