ABSTRACT

Maelstrom: Christian Dominionism and Far-Right Insurgence illuminates the latest outbreak of right-wing extremism in America. This book reviews the cyclical nature of right-wing resurgences in American history, dismisses the appropriateness of the word “fascism” to explain them, and then describes in depth the goal of “reconstructing” American institutions on the basis of biblical principles. It critiques the popular view that far-right politics is carried by stupid, socially isolated, nuts. To this end, it discusses the logicality of the “big lie” and examines in detail how people are recruited into the far-right, by entertaining the theories of authoritarianism and resource mobilization. Finally, it characterizes how the ends-oriented rationality of far-right activists differs from the mini-max criterion of rationality utilized by the ordinary person. This can motivate them to be violent and can frustrate efforts by the government to control them.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|5 pages

The Collection

A Study of Right-Wing Extremism

chapter 2|10 pages

The American Far-Right

Historically and Sociologically

chapter 3|11 pages

Christian Dominionism and Its Critics

part Interlude 1|36 pages

Fetus Fetish

chapter 4|11 pages

Christian Dominionism and Violence1

chapter 5|11 pages

The Big Lie

Its Model, Making, and Motive

chapter 6|11 pages

The Danse Macabre

Deadly Miscommunications

part Interlude 2|28 pages

God and Guns

chapter 7|6 pages

The Case of the Minor Family1

chapter 8|11 pages

Revisiting Authoritarianism

chapter 9|9 pages

“Fascism” Reconsidered