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OverviewThe white nationalist movement in the United States is nothing new. Yet, prior to the 2017 ""Unite the Right"" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, many Americans assumed that it existed only on the fringes of our political system, a dark cultural relic pushed out of the mainstream by the victories of the Civil Rights Movement. The events in Charlottesville made clear that we had underestimated the scale of the white nationalist movement; Donald Trump's reaction to it brought home the reality that the movement had gained political clout in the White House. Yet, as this book argues, the mainstreaming of white nationalism did not begin with Trump, but began during the Obama era. Hard White explains how the mainstreaming of white nationalism occurred, pointing to two major shifts in the movement. First, Barack Obama's presidential tenure, along with increases in minority representation, fostered white anxiety about Muslims, Latinx immigrants, and black Americans. While anti-Semitic sentiments remained somewhat on the fringes, hostility toward Muslims, Latinos, and African Americans bubbled up into mainstream conservative views. At the same time, white nationalist leaders shifted their focus and resources from protest to electoral politics, and the book traces the evolution of the movement's political forays from David Duke to the American Freedom Party, the Tea Party, and, finally, the emergence of the Alt-Right. Interestingly it also shows that white hostility peaked in 2012--not 2016. Richard C. Fording and Sanford F. Schram also show that the key to Trump's win was not persuading economically anxious voters to become racially conservative. Rather, Trump mobilized racially hostile voters in the key swing states that flipped from blue to red in 2016. In fact, the authors show that voter turnout among white racial conservatives in the six states that Trump flipped was significantly higher in 2016 compared to 2012. They also show that white racial conservatives were far more likely to participate in the election beyond voting in 2016. However, the rise of white nationalism has also mobilized racial progressives. While the book argues that white extremism will have enduring effects on American electoral politics for some time to come, it suggests that the way forward is to refocus the conversation on social solidarity, concluding with ideas for how to build this solidarity. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Richard C Fording , Sanford F Schram (Hunter College and CUNY Graduate Center)Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA Imprint: Oxford University Press, USA ISBN: 9780197500521ISBN 10: 0197500528 Publication Date: 20 August 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Undefined Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""Fording and Schram produce a powerful and well documented case for how once marginal far-right, racist positions made their way to the heart of the Republican Party. This mainstreaming of racist discourse, they believe, successfully overshadowed material class interests, preparing the ground for victims of social retrenchment to become among its loudest advocates. Trump's success must be understood as the mobilization of racial resentment to undo the cultural and social change of the Obama years. Fording and Schram bring us closer to understanding how race and class interacted to produce the seducing and duping of so many American voters."" -- David Abraham, University of Miami School of Law ""Fording and Schram deftly bring together theory and data on the Trump appeal in American politics. They argue and skillfully show that Trump captivated a large segment of white voters with his racial appeals against a range of minority groups. They show that Trump stoked this generalized outgroup hostility to gain votes while at the same time normalizing racism in American politics. A must-read."" -- Loren Collingwood, University of California, Riverside ""For the past few years scholars and the lay public have struggled with how Donald Trump, backed by an army of white nationalists, secured the Oval Office in the wake of the first black president. In Hard White, Fording and Schram leave nary a stone unturned to explain why such a bigot successfully captured the White House. Outlining a theory of ""outgroup hostility,"" Fording and Schram illustrate how racism became mainstreamed to such an extent that it actually helped win the White House, not lose it. The best among a slew of books that either anticipated Trump, or tried to explain his successful run after the fact, Hard White is a must-read for anyone interested in something beyond a speculative account of where the GOP is likely headed."" -- Christopher Sebastian Parker, University of Washington" Author InformationRichard C. Fording is Marilyn Williams Elmore and John Durr Elmore Endowed Professor of Political Science at the University of Alabama. Sanford F. Schram is Professor of Political Science at Hunter College and Professor of Sociology at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |