Rooted in an understanding of how the fascist body is constructed, we
can develop the collective power to dismember it.
Fascist and reactionary populist forces have undeniably swelled in the
US in recent years. To effectively counter fascist movements, we need to
understand them beyond their most visible and public expressions. To do
this, Jack Bratich asserts, we must dig deeper into the psyche and body
that gives rise to fascist formations. There we will find
microfascism, or the cultural ways in which a fascist understanding of
the world is generated from the hatreds that suffuse everyday life.
By highlighting the misogyny at fascism's core, we are able to observe a
key process in the formation of a fascist body. Recognizing the
microfascism behind appeals to recover the past glory of white male
subjects created by earlier foundational wars, we see how histories of
settler colonialism, genocide, and domination are animating the deadly
mission of fascism today. By focusing on the variety of ways the
resurgent fascist tendency courts its own destruction (and demands the
destruction of others), we can trace how fascism refines and expands the
death and annihilation that underpins capitalist, colonial, and
patriarchal systems.
On Microfascism are far-reaching and unsettling. Still, Bratich
insists, the new fascism is not as powerful as its adherents wish us to
believe. To defeat it, we must develop and defend a "micro-antifascism"
grounded in the ethics of mutual aid and care in the everyday. Rooted in
an understanding of how the fascist body is constructed, we can develop
the collective power to dismember it.