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It was all a Meme: examining the strategic utility of lone-actor, right-wing violent extremist manifestos

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posted on 2025-07-18, 03:05 authored by Jordon Jack Borg
<p dir="ltr">The publication of manifestos prior to carrying out acts of domestic terrorism is a rising trend within the far-right extremist movement. Despite these publications being analysed by terrorism studies scholars, often through thematic or linguistic analyses, the basic strategic utility of these manifestos remains underexplored. This thesis seeks to generate hypotheses as to why extremists author and disseminate these manifestos. It does so by performing a multidisciplinary evaluation of the strategic significance the manifestos serve for their authors, and for the broader right-wing extremist movement. Five manifestos are examined through an inductive close-reading. They are then analysed using three interpretive frameworks drawing on the theories of three academic disciplines: sociology and political science, communication studies, and postmodern philosophy. The findings suggest that in-group signalling and identity formation provide the strongest explanation of why extremists release their manifestos prior to their violent acts. It is hoped that this thesis can provide a starting point for future research into the purpose of these publications.</p>

History

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Literature Review -- Chapter 3: Methodology -- Chapter 4: Analytical Framework and Case Studies Overview -- Chapter 5: Sociology and Political Science Lens -- Chapter 6: Communications Studies Lens -- Chapter 7: Postmodernist Philosophical Lens -- Chapter 8: Discussion -- Chapter 9: Conclusion -- Bibliography

Awarding Institution

Macquarie University

Degree Type

Thesis MRes

Degree

Master of Research

Department, Centre or School

School of International Studies

Year of Award

2025

Principal Supervisor

Julian Droogan

Additional Supervisor 1

Mariam Farida

Rights

Copyright: The Author Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer

Language

English

Extent

79 pages

Former Identifiers

AMIS ID: 476066

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