Understanding Racist Activism: Theory, Methods, and Research
In: Routledge Studies in Fascism and the Far Right
chapter Studying racist activism: methods and lessons -- chapter SECTION I Fear, stigma, and other consequences of studying racists -- chapter Preface to Section I -- chapter 1 Studying the enemy -- chapter 2 Why I returned to studying the far-right -- chapter 3 White-knuckle research: emotional dynamics in fieldwork with racist activists -- chapter SECTION II Methods of studying racist activism -- chapter Preface to Section II -- chapter 4 White on white: interviewing women in United States white supremacist groups -- chapter 5 The banality of violence -- chapter SECTION III Theoretical lens and templates -- chapter Preface to Section III -- chapter 6 Positioning hate -- chapter 7 Does gender matter in the United States far-right? -- chapter 8 Methods, interpretation, and ethics in the study of white supremacist perpetrators -- chapter SECTION IV Entering and leaving white supremacism -- chapter Preface to Section IV -- chapter 9 Women in the 1920s Ku Klux Klan movement -- chapter 10 Becoming a racist: women in contemporary Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazi groups -- chapter 11 Personal effects from far-right activism -- chapter SECTION V Directions for future research -- chapter Preface to Section V -- chapter 12 Women and organized racial terrorism in the United States -- chapter 13 Women in extreme right parties and movements: a comparison of the Netherlands and the United States (co-authored with Annette Linden) -- chapter 14 The duality of spectacle and secrecy: a case study of fraternalism in the 1920s U.S. Ku Klux Klan (co-authored with Amy McDowell).