Este artículo se centra en el impacto de pensadores europeos –cuyas ideas influenciaron los movimientos nazi y fascista de entreguerras en el siglo xx– sobre el actual movimiento de extrema derecha digital de la Alt-Right, localizado sobre todo en Estados Unidos. En concreto, explora las ideas sobre gobierno autoritario desarrolladas por intelectuales como Friederich Nietzsche (1844-1900), principalmente, o Julius Evola (1898-1974), y su uso contemporáneo en el discurso empleado por el líder de dicha corriente política iliberal estadounidense, Richard B. Spencer. El objetivo es construir un análisis del pensamiento de la derecha radical transnacional, específicamente del pensamiento autoritario, a través del tiempo y de medios totalmente distintos como pueden ser la literatura versus Internet.
This article recounts the neglected story of a group of radical-right intellectuals based in Montreal, who mobilized during the 1930s for the establishment of a new Canadian state. Inspired by Ukrainian ultraconservative thought, the Italian School of Elitism, and fascist corporatism, this diverse group founded an interwar movement called the Classocracy League of Canada. Their vision framed Canadian identity in Christian and European supremacist terms, while its leading members were engaged with other Canadian and transnational fascistic organizations, such as the Christian National Social Party and the Friends of National Spain. Although the Classocracy League of Canada remained ultimately marginal, its vision of racially restricted pluralism represented a novel form of exclusionary politics at the basis of which was fascist ideology.
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