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A ‘fertile ground for poisonous doctrines’? Understanding far-right electoral appeal in the south Pennine textile belt, c.1967-19791. / Collinson, Marc.
Yn: Contemporary British History, Cyfrol 34, Rhif 2, 02.04.2020, t. 273-298.

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Collinson M. A ‘fertile ground for poisonous doctrines’? Understanding far-right electoral appeal in the south Pennine textile belt, c.1967-19791. Contemporary British History. 2020 Ebr 2;34(2):273-298. Epub 2020 Ion 10. doi: 10.1080/13619462.2019.1710130

Author

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A ‘fertile ground for poisonous doctrines’?

T2 - Understanding far-right electoral appeal in the south Pennine textile belt, c.1967-19791

AU - Collinson, Marc

PY - 2020/4/2

Y1 - 2020/4/2

N2 - Historical far-right organisations have long proved pervasive, but are rarely interpreted as competitive political parties. While these minorityparties and movements never secured significant representation, they influenced municipal and constituency political activity. Focusing onthe ‘textile belt’ of Eastern Lancashire and West Yorkshire, this article seeks to understand how far-right organisations engaged in localelectoral politics. It considers the influence of regional economic changes, caused by industrial realignment, and how opponents, primarily local Labour parties, interpreted post-war fascism and the concerns it engendered. The article then examines the growing influence of Labour’s anti-fascist campaigns, the popular appeal of far-right politics, and the composition of such group’s memberships. As farright institutional archives are limited, the article uses material produced by predominant local Labour parties. Alongside providing new perspectives, it encourages scholars to interpret far-right organisations as electoral actors, rather than mere cultural and political pariahs.

AB - Historical far-right organisations have long proved pervasive, but are rarely interpreted as competitive political parties. While these minorityparties and movements never secured significant representation, they influenced municipal and constituency political activity. Focusing onthe ‘textile belt’ of Eastern Lancashire and West Yorkshire, this article seeks to understand how far-right organisations engaged in localelectoral politics. It considers the influence of regional economic changes, caused by industrial realignment, and how opponents, primarily local Labour parties, interpreted post-war fascism and the concerns it engendered. The article then examines the growing influence of Labour’s anti-fascist campaigns, the popular appeal of far-right politics, and the composition of such group’s memberships. As farright institutional archives are limited, the article uses material produced by predominant local Labour parties. Alongside providing new perspectives, it encourages scholars to interpret far-right organisations as electoral actors, rather than mere cultural and political pariahs.

KW - Decline

KW - Far-right

KW - Lancashire

KW - National Front

KW - Yorkshire

U2 - 10.1080/13619462.2019.1710130

DO - 10.1080/13619462.2019.1710130

M3 - Article

VL - 34

SP - 273

EP - 298

JO - Contemporary British History

JF - Contemporary British History

SN - 1743-7997

IS - 2

ER -