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OverviewThis book examines how far-right politics and news media shape one another, exposing, contesting, and at times inadvertently legitimising white supremacist, violent misogynist, and other far-right ideas. It situates these dynamics within the economic and structural transformations associated with the neoliberal restructuring of media industries, demonstrating how commercial imperatives, audience capture, and shifts in journalistic practice intersect with deeper histories of inequality, coloniality, and exclusion to structure contemporary news environments. Drawing on research from Australia, the United States, Germany, Spain, and Portugal, the book analyses how newsroom routines and editorial practices interact with far-right strategies to influence coverage and, over time, recalibrate the parameters of public political debate. Case studies of the January 6 Capitol insurrection, the Christchurch terrorist attack, electoral breakthroughs in Iberia, and German reporting on ""incel"" online spaces show how the pursuit of immediacy, spectacle, and a narrow performance of balance can, for susceptible audiences, render far-right narratives increasingly visible and, in some contexts, implicitly legitimate. While the chapters do not offer sustained exemplars of alternative practice, they signpost the potential for a historically informed and critically engaged journalism to disrupt these dynamics and to produce more accurate, accountable, and contextually rigorous reporting on the far right. Integrating insights from media studies, political communication, and cultural sociology, this volume provides a theoretically grounded and empirically rich resource for scholars, journalists, activists, and policymakers. It offers conceptual and analytical tools for examining how far-right ideas gain traction in contemporary political discourse and how media practices might more effectively respond to and resist the political and social challenges presented by far-right mainstreaming. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Imogen Richards (Deakin University, Australia)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781032706467ISBN 10: 1032706465 Pages: 174 Publication Date: 28 January 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews“While there has been a great deal of attention paid to the role of social media on the rise and mainstreaming of the far right in recent years, the very same mainstream media that has reported on it and played a significant role, has experienced critical scrutiny and analysis. That makes this outstanding interdisciplinary collection on the complex and often contradictory relationship between news media coverage in particular and the mainstreaming of the far right across different democratic contexts such as the UK, UK, Australia, Spain, Portugal, Germany and others an important and much needed intervention. What is more, it goes beyond traditional approaches to media bias and propaganda, or binary understandings that see the media and democracy on one side, and extremist threats to the latter and truth on the other, but looks at the ways that mainstream media can enable and accommodate or constrain, challenge and combat the far right and reactionary tendencies. The research and analysis in this collection show us another way to not only understand the complex role of the media in the mainstreaming of the far right and processes involved, but also hold the media to account and address them. It is for that reason I recommend this book to researchers, activists, and, crucially, journalists.” Aaron Winter, Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Lancaster University Author InformationImogen Richards is a senior lecturer in criminology at Deakin University, Australia. Her research examines comparative forms of political violence, with a particular focus on the mediation of violence and its dynamics. Her solo and co-authored books include Neoliberalism and Neo-Jihadism (2020), Criminologists in the Media (2022), Global Heating and the Australian Far Right (2023), and The Aesthetic Politics of Far-Right Environmentalism (2025). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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