Acknowledgements
Prologue
Introduction
1 Theorizing the Far-Right over the Longue Durée
1 Situating the Study of the Far-Right
2 Marxist Theorizations of the Far-Right
2.1 Capitalism, Crisis and Fascism
2.2 The Social Basis of Fascism
2.3 Bonapartism and the Fascist State
3 An Alternative Theoretical Framework – Capital, Race and Space
4 Uneven and Combined Development and the Pathologies of Capital
5 The International-Geopolitical Determinants of the Far-Right
6 The Contradictions of Liberalism and Liberal Orders
7 Race: Master Signifier of the Far-Right
8 Conclusions
2 The Politics of the 1848 Revolutions and the Origins of the Far-Right
1 Historicizing the 1848 Revolutions and the Contradictions of Liberal Modernity over the Longue Durée
2 The Politics of the Ancien Régime Right before 1848
3 The Politics of the 1848 Revolutions and the Emergence of the Far-Right
4 The Emergence of Bonapartism as a Model Far-Right State
5 Conclusions
3 The Rise of the Far-Right
1 Capitalist Imperialism and Geopolitics in the Rise of the European Far-Right
2 Race and Racialized Politics in the Developing Liberal International Order
3 Germany: from Elite to Subaltern Far-Right
4 The Alldeutscher Verband
5 Bund der Landwirte
6 France: the Rise of a ‘Revolutionary’ Right Prefiguring Fascism
7 Britain: Hegemonic Decline and the Structural Limits on the Rise of the Far-Right
8 Conclusions
4 Fascism: ‘Revolution’ of the Right
1 Framing Fascism as a Form of Far-Right
2 The Crisis of the Bourgeois State and the Rise of Fascism
2.1 Italy: the Crisis of Liberal Hegemony and the Revolutionary Origins of Fascism
2.2 Germany: Capitalist Crisis and the International Political-Economic Contradictions of the Weimar Republic
2.3 The Social Bases of Fascism
2.4 The Political Character of Fascism
3 The Political Economy of the Fascist State
3.1 Organization of the Economy
3.2 A Sui Generis Capitalist War Economy
3.3 Nazi Imperialism: a Provisional and Bifurcated System
4 Liberal Order and the Rise of Fascism
5 Conclusions
References
Index