Post-Homophobic Imaginaries amongst the Far-Right in Germany and Switzerland
Abstract
Alongside violently opposing gender and sexual equalities, far-right parties in Western Europe have increasingly denied their political positions as homophobic. This article explores how far-right party actors in Germany and Switzerland actively use liberal discourses to advance reactionary gender and sexual politics beyond outright opposition. It queries how party actors consolidate hetero-patriarchal ideological commitments with a desire to include homosexual subjects within the parties’ respective ideologies. This study argues that reactionary actors in Germany and Switzerland are highly adaptive to the ‘post-homophobic’ discursive terrain they navigate. In doing so, openly gay and lesbian actors within far-right parties and their allies are not operating in a vacuum. They can draw on an expansive archive of mainstream political discourses, including normative ideas about the neoliberal family, a gendered economy of reproduction and the potent construction of homophobic immigrants. Our analysis thus demonstrates that liberal ideas around sexuality are not always overtly opposed to but also actively invested in for reactionary gains.
Keywords
- Homophobia
- homonationalism
- homonormativity
- Switzerland
- Germany
Authors
Links
Publication information
Institutions:
Authors:
Stefanie Claudine Boulila, Antonia Marienfeld, Fabienne Wellner
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis, Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power
Languages:
English
Media Type:
City:
Abingdon
Year:
2024
Themes:
Disciplines:
Research labels:
Sexual orientation
Violence – harassment
Nationalism – homonationalism – femonationalism
Norms – normativity
Subjects:
Social Work, Sociology
Genres:
Article