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British Fascism After the Holocaust: From the Birth of Denial to the Notting Hill Riots 1939–1958
Literature review
Defining fascism
Methodology
Notes
The unbroken thread: British fascism during World War II
The early war years
The struggle on the inside: the effect of internment
The struggle on the outside
After internment
Unique? A transnational context
Notes
‘Wir kommen wieder’: the re-emergence of fascism 1945–1948
The re-emergence and the effect of Palestine
Organised groups in the immediate postwar period
Arnold Leese and extreme far right
Pre-union movement Mosley-linked groups
Anti-fascist response
Notes
A Jewish invention? The birth of Holocaust denial
Societal reactions to the Holocaust
Pioneer deniers: British fascists' reactions
Count Potocki de Montalk
Postwar denial and 'concentration camp fairy tales'
'Immoral equivalencies'
Major General Fuller and Liddell Hart
Anglo-French denial links
Early American Holocaust denial
Notes
Europe-a-nation: transnational ideologies
Oswald Mosley and Europe a nation
Beyond fascism and democracy
Not new or unique
Mosley's doctrine of higher forms
Francis Parker Yockey: an alternative Europeanism
Look East
Cause of the split
Notes
King, country and empire: traditional nationalist ideologies
The British conspiratorial tradition
The postwar ideas of A.K. Chesterton
Suez
Rhodesia and the unilateral declaration of independence
Major General Hilton
Influence of Chesterton: then and now
Notes
Windrush to Notting Hill: race and reactions to non-white immigration
The arrival
Official responses
Popular responses
Far-right responses to immigration
The 1958 Notting Hill riots
Race
Notes
A relationship in hate: postwar transatlantic fascist networks
Transatlantic antisemitism and Holocaust denial
American influence in Britain
The Nazi fringe
Anglo-Saxon-British-Israel Movement
Racism and immigration
Global white unity
Notes
Bibliography
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