By Greg Johnson 8
Interview with Harold Covington, Part 2
TOQ: Like most of the people in the racialist movement today, my awakening and education were enormously aided by the internet. You yourself have a substantial web presence. Yet you are known as a staunch critic of movement’s strong dependence on the internet. Can you explain your views on the virtues and limits of the internet for white nationalism? Harold Covington: The...
Read MoreBy Greg Johnson 22
Interview with Harold Covington, Part 1
TOQ: Could you give us a brief autobiography and tell us how you became involved in White Nationalism? Harold Covington: I was born in Burlington, North Carolina in 1953. I had my first dose of racial reality at age 15 when I was thrown into an integrated high school in Chapel Hill, NC which was bad by the standards of the day (1968) but which of course was a kindergarten compared...
Read MoreBy Greg Johnson 10
Sibelius & the Nazis:
Anatomy of a Smear
I am a great admirer of Finnish composer Jean Sibelius, who along with Richard Strauss and Ralph Vaughan Williams, was one of the last generation (so far) of great European Romantic composers. Thus my attention was drawn to a November 29, 2009 article about Sibelius in the Chronicle of Higher Education, “A Composer’s Ties to Nazi Germany Come Under New...
Read MoreHunter Wallace in Czech
Editor’s Note: “Elite Status” by Hunter Wallace, a.k.a. Prozium, has been translated into Czech as “Vládnoucí elita” and published on the Delian Diver (Délský potápěč) site. The article was originally published on Occidental Dissent, but Delian Diver found it on TOQ Online and linked to us. Congratulations Mr. Wallace!Kdo by měl...
Read MoreBy Ted Sallis 3
Avant-Garde Fascism
Avant-Garde Fascism: The Mobilization of Myth, Art, and Culture in France, 1909–1939Mark AntliffDurham and London: Duke University Press, 2007Mark Antliff, a professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies at Duke University, has put together a useful analysis of the cultural-aesthetic memes utilized by French fascists of 1909-1939 to promote their visions of national...
Read MoreBy Hunter Wallace 12
Elite Status
Who should rule?Logging on this morning, I see that this has once again become a burning issue among the commentators. So far, I haven’t had much to say about the topic. I don’t aspire to rule over anyone. Becoming a politician isn’t a good fit with my introverted personality type. It is a task that I would prefer to leave to others. We have already had one commentator storm...
Read MoreBy Michael O'Meara 2
Another European Destiny, Part II
Editor’s Note: For the first part of this review essay on Dominique Venner’ s Ernst Jünger: Un autre destin européen (Paris: Éds. du Rocher, 2009), click here.4. Der ArbeiterJünger’s nationalist politics turned out to be a passing phase in his long life. By 1930, after the wind started to go from the revolutionary-nationalist sails and the National...
Read MoreBy Michael O'Meara 2
Another European Destiny
Dominique VennerErnst Jünger: Un autre destin européenParis: Éds. du Rocher, 2009In Dominique Venner’s historical essay, Ernst Jünger: Un autre destin européen, the subject is presented as une figure ultime, a European archetype provisionally absent from Europe today, but nevertheless one rooted in the depths of the European spirit — and destined, thus, to...
Read MoreOliver Pendleton in Czech
Oliver Pendleton’s TOQ Online review essay “Volk Music” on Laibach’s Volk and Kunst der Fuge has been translated into Czech. Also, his review essay on Boyd Rice’s Standing in Two Circles, “Uneasy Listening” seems to have been heavily mined for another piece on the same site. Thank you to our Czech readers, and congratulations Dr....
Read MoreBy Kerry Bolton 2
Wyndham Lewis
Percy Wyndham Lewis is credited with being the founder of the only modernist cultural movement indigenous to Britain. Nonetheless, he is seldom spoken of in the same breath as his contemporaries, Ezra Pound, James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, and others. Lewis was one of the number of cultural figures who rejected the bourgeois liberalism and democracy of the nineteenth century that...
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