Beyond Instrumentalization: Far-Right Women’s Appropriation of Feminism in France

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Beyond Instrumentalization: Far-Right Women’s Appropriation of Feminism in France

Abstract

Femonationalism, or the selective use of feminist discourse to advance far-right causes, has often been analyzed through the lens of party politics. Shifting the focus to grassroots activists, this article studies a group of far-right female activists in France organized as a women-only collective of “identitarian feminists” to explore how these grassroots activists articulate anti-feminist frames while also appropriating selective aspects of feminism. The study relies on three types of empirical data: a long-term digital observation of the collective, a critical analysis of documents, and 10 semi-structured interviews. These data reveal that these activists diverge from traditional anti-feminism and instead reflect a femonationalist appropriation of feminism. This appropriation can be seen in three interconnected frames used by the collective in the fight against street harassment: an opposition to intersectional feminism, the use of postfeminist frames, and the racialization of sexism

Keywords

  • Far-Right
  • Feminism
  • Racialisation of Sexism
  • Femonationalism
  • Social Movements
  • France

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Publication information

Publisher:

Cambridge University Press, Politics & Gender

Languages:

English

Media Type:

PDF

City:

Cambridge

Year:

2025

Themes:

Disciplines:

Research labels:

Nationalism – homonationalism – femonationalism
Sexism
Race – racialization – racism
Struggles – social movements – activism

Subjects:

Gender Studies, Sociology

Genres:

Article