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Fear : New Zealand's hostile underworld of extremists / Byron C. Clark.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Auckland, New Zealand : HarperCollins Publishers, 2023.Description: 328 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781775542308
  • 1775542300
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: FearDDC classification:
  • 320.5 23
LOC classification:
  • JC599.N45 C537 2023
Contents:
Starting with #Gamergate -- Watching a disinformation campaign in real time -- Action Zealandia -- Tube full of hate -- Inciting fear, online and offline -- Deus vult! The Far Right and Catholicism -- Tyranny and evil: the Christian Right -- The new conservatives -- Qanon: conspiracy theory in the age of algorithms -- Advance New Zealand -- Voices for freedom -- The outdoors party -- 'The Fox News of the Pasifika community' -- Counterspin media -- Sovereign citizens -- Rural rebellion: populism in the provinces -- Hindutva in Aotearoa -- A brief history of white New Zealand -- Southern settler colonies and Rhodesian nostalgia -- Women and the Alt-Right -- Far-Right speculative fiction and the infodemic -- The river of filth -- Our future in a post-truth world -- Afterword.
Summary: "... Maps New Zealand's alt-right underworld and unearths the roots of the occupation that ended in a violent protest on the grounds of Parliament. Speaking after the chaos of the protest that stopped the nation, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told a press conference, 'One day, it will be our job to try and understand how a group of people could succumb to such wild and dangerous mis- and disinformation.' That day isn't in the future. Mis- and disinformation had been identified as a problem before the convoy to parliament had even been suggested. While that protest looked like something that 'couldn't happen here', things that supposedly couldn't happen here seemed to be happening with alarming frequency. Three years prior, an armed gunman had entered two mosques in Christchurch and taken the lives of 51 worshipers, an event that shocked a country where mass shootings are almost unheard of. A few months later, a New Zealand Defence Force soldier who had founded a far-right group was arrested, and is awaiting court martial, accused of espionage. We are no longer living in ordinary times, where political violence is unimaginable, and conspiracy theorists are marginal figures whose ideas can be laughed at. How did things get to this point? Fear: New Zealand's hostile underworld of extremists helps make sense of the tributaries feeding the river of alt-right activism, identifies the main perpetrators, and looks at why New Zealand is susceptible to misinformation, conspiracy theory and fear-mongering"--Publisher information.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Non-Fiction - New Zealand Non-Fiction - New Zealand Pop-Up Library Non-Fiction Non Fiction 320.5 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available W00006303

Includes bibliographical references.

Starting with #Gamergate -- Watching a disinformation campaign in real time -- Action Zealandia -- Tube full of hate -- Inciting fear, online and offline -- Deus vult! The Far Right and Catholicism -- Tyranny and evil: the Christian Right -- The new conservatives -- Qanon: conspiracy theory in the age of algorithms -- Advance New Zealand -- Voices for freedom -- The outdoors party -- 'The Fox News of the Pasifika community' -- Counterspin media -- Sovereign citizens -- Rural rebellion: populism in the provinces -- Hindutva in Aotearoa -- A brief history of white New Zealand -- Southern settler colonies and Rhodesian nostalgia -- Women and the Alt-Right -- Far-Right speculative fiction and the infodemic -- The river of filth -- Our future in a post-truth world -- Afterword.

"... Maps New Zealand's alt-right underworld and unearths the roots of the occupation that ended in a violent protest on the grounds of Parliament. Speaking after the chaos of the protest that stopped the nation, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told a press conference, 'One day, it will be our job to try and understand how a group of people could succumb to such wild and dangerous mis- and disinformation.' That day isn't in the future. Mis- and disinformation had been identified as a problem before the convoy to parliament had even been suggested. While that protest looked like something that 'couldn't happen here', things that supposedly couldn't happen here seemed to be happening with alarming frequency. Three years prior, an armed gunman had entered two mosques in Christchurch and taken the lives of 51 worshipers, an event that shocked a country where mass shootings are almost unheard of. A few months later, a New Zealand Defence Force soldier who had founded a far-right group was arrested, and is awaiting court martial, accused of espionage. We are no longer living in ordinary times, where political violence is unimaginable, and conspiracy theorists are marginal figures whose ideas can be laughed at. How did things get to this point? Fear: New Zealand's hostile underworld of extremists helps make sense of the tributaries feeding the river of alt-right activism, identifies the main perpetrators, and looks at why New Zealand is susceptible to misinformation, conspiracy theory and fear-mongering"--Publisher information.

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