Based on the cute cover picture of a smartphone showing a woman in an American flag apron with emojis coming out of the phone, I was not really expecting this book to read like a thesis, but it unfortunately does. I did find my eyes glazing over while reading at many points due to the high levels of turgidity (found myself mentally editing the writing at points, e.g., “But strategically focusing employing counter-influencers offers potential to focus on aspects of digital culture that are key in engagement” (193) can be shortened to “But strategically focusing counter-influencers can affect engagement in digital culture”). Overall though, this isn’t a bad book. The Women of the Far Right is a guide to a handful of female far right influencers who are some combination of trad wife, red pilled, and racist. Basically these are women who make YouTube videos and post on Instagram (or, if they’ve been banned, on alternative far-right social media platforms) about how they’re hashtag blessed living in domestic bliss as housewives, doing their part to make more WASP babies to prevent the undesirable races from taking over America. I had actually never heard of any of the women mentioned in this book before (some names: Lauren Southern, Brittany Sellner, Lana Lokteff), which is probably a good thing.
Besides learning about the differences between alt-right and far right (apparently alt-right only refers to the North American far right movement between 2016-2019 and/or far right movements involving Richard Spencer) and how both left-wing and right-wing populism exists (“left-wing populists… view corporations and big-business-friendly politicians as the corrupt elite and the pure people as the working class and marginalized communities” 24), I also learned more about what kinds of ideas far right female influencers are advancing, most of which can be categorized under Racism, humanity’s most ancient trope. Lana Lokteff has apparently both denied the Holocaust and promoted “conspiratorial claims that the West was undergoing a white genocide orchestrated by feminists and a Jewish elite to lower white birth rates and encourage mass immigration — a process known among the far right as the ‘Great Replacement’.” (64) I guess in recent years the far right has become a bit more permissive in the racial groups that they’ll let in, since two of the women profiled in this book are biracial (both are part Asian). Leidig comments on the oddness of them supporting a “…political ideology that for most of its existence simultaneously excluded them from the picture and included them in the category of ‘inferior peoples’.” (32-33)
Male supremacy is another common theme among the far right female influencers. Basically that men should be the heads of household because this is the natural role of men, and modern society is anti-masculine thanks to the feminazis, etc. Intriguingly, the demographics for followers of these far-right women heavily skew male. Lauren Chen mentions that 85 percent of her viewers are male, and another far-right influencer also mentions in a video that her viewers are mostly men. That these women are mainly attracting male viewers surprised me but it really shouldn’t have, considering these women are basically play-acting the incel waifu fantasy for the camera. I am not necessarily _as_ on-board the Judith Butler train as Leidig seems to be when it comes to gender essentialism, but Leidig makes a great point about how these influencers take for granted rights and opportunities we as women have now that we would’t have had one or two generations ago. “When these women revert to traditional gender norms as a reactionary movement against feminism, they reflect a generational amnesia. The term generational amnesia… refers to the idea that ‘knowledge extinction occurs because younger generations are not aware of past biological conditions.’ For example, consider a species of fish that becomes extinct over a period of one hundred years. The first generation notices the baseline level of abundance of the fish, and then when they retire, they notice that the level is lower. The next generation, though, considers the new low level of fish to be normal, unaware of the baseline level used by the previous generation. The cycle continues…” (201) Ironically, several of the far right female influencers mentioned in this book end up returning to making videos and promoting their political brands online after giving birth (despite criticism from some of their viewers that they should solely focus on their children), so it seems even they are not fully relinquishing the benefits feminism has won them.