Douglas Murray (Portuguese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Douglas Murray" in Portuguese language version.

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brill.com

  • *Stewart, Blake (2020). «The Rise of Far-Right Civilizationism» (EPUB). Critical Sociology. 46 (7–8): 1207–1220. doi:10.1177/0896920519894051. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Acclaim for Murray’s thought has been widespread, and ranges from liberal French public intellectual Bernard Henri-Levy, who claimed him to be ‘one of the most important public intellectuals today’, to authoritarian anti-immigrant hardliners such as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who went so far as to promote The Strange Death of Europe on his Facebook page in Spring 2018... Murray’s book [The Madness of Crowds] remodels a much older theory of so-called ‘cultural Marxism’, which has long history in far-right thought. 
    • Kundnani, Arun (2012). «Blind spot? Security narratives and far-right violence». Security and Human Rights. 23 (2): 129–146. doi:10.1163/18750230-99900008. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. in January 2011, Douglas Murray, the associate director of the Henry Jackson Society, which influences the government on national security policy, stated that, in relation to the EDL: ‘If you were ever going to have a grassroots response from non-Muslims to Islamism, that would be how you’d want it, surely.’ … these statements suggest that ‘counterjihadist’ ideologies, through reworking far-right ideology and appropriating official discourse, are able to evade categorisation as a source of far-right violence. 

commentary.org

doi.org

dx.doi.org

  • *Stewart, Blake (2020). «The Rise of Far-Right Civilizationism» (EPUB). Critical Sociology. 46 (7–8): 1207–1220. doi:10.1177/0896920519894051. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Acclaim for Murray’s thought has been widespread, and ranges from liberal French public intellectual Bernard Henri-Levy, who claimed him to be ‘one of the most important public intellectuals today’, to authoritarian anti-immigrant hardliners such as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who went so far as to promote The Strange Death of Europe on his Facebook page in Spring 2018... Murray’s book [The Madness of Crowds] remodels a much older theory of so-called ‘cultural Marxism’, which has long history in far-right thought. 
    • Kundnani, Arun (2012). «Blind spot? Security narratives and far-right violence». Security and Human Rights. 23 (2): 129–146. doi:10.1163/18750230-99900008. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. in January 2011, Douglas Murray, the associate director of the Henry Jackson Society, which influences the government on national security policy, stated that, in relation to the EDL: ‘If you were ever going to have a grassroots response from non-Muslims to Islamism, that would be how you’d want it, surely.’ … these statements suggest that ‘counterjihadist’ ideologies, through reworking far-right ideology and appropriating official discourse, are able to evade categorisation as a source of far-right violence. 
    • Murray and the Eurabia conspiracy theory:
      • Pertwee, Ed (2020). «Donald Trump, the anti-Muslim far right and the new conservative revolution». Ethnic and Racial Studies. 43 (16): 211–230. doi:10.1080/01419870.2020.1749688Acessível livremente. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Ye’Or’s Eurabia: the Euro-Arab Axis (2005) is the canonical work of the genre (Bangstad 2013; Larsson 2012), but extemporizations on her basic theme can be found in the work of many conservative writers during the late 2000s and 2010s, such as Melanie Phillips, Mark Steyn, Bruce Bawer, Christopher Caldwell, Douglas Murray and, more recently, Alt-Right-linked figures such as Lauren Southern and Raheem Kassam. The conclusive differentiator between counter-jihadist and more mainstream conservative laments about Western decline is the former’s decidedly conspiratorial framing... 
      • Murray and the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory: * Stewart, Blake (2020). «The Rise of Far-Right Civilizationism» (EPUB). Critical Sociology. 46 (7–8): 1207–1220. doi:10.1177/0896920519894051. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Acclaim for Murray’s thought has been widespread, and ranges from liberal French public intellectual Bernard Henri-Levy, who claimed him to be ‘one of the most important public intellectuals today’, to authoritarian anti-immigrant hardliners such as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who went so far as to promote The Strange Death of Europe on his Facebook page in Spring 2018... Murray’s book [The Madness of Crowds] remodels a much older theory of so-called ‘cultural Marxism’, which has long history in far-right thought. 
      • Murray described as Islamophobic:

henryjacksonsociety.org

heraldscotland.com

huffingtonpost.co.uk

jacobinmag.com

jstor.org

  • Murray and the Great Replacement conspiracy theory: * Ramakrishna, Kumar (2020). «The White Supremacist Terrorist Threat to Asia». Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses (em inglês). 12 (4): 1–7. JSTOR 26918075. Consultado em 7 de janeiro de 2021. This Great Replacement motif articulated by Murray, Camus and other prominent conservative intellectuals has been weaponised as a rallying cry for white supremacists around the world, including Robert Bowers, who killed 11 worshippers at a Pittsburgh synagogue in October 2018 and Tarrant, the Christchurch attacker, whose own manifesto posted online is called “The Great Replacement”. 

newsweek.com

readsludge.com

sagepub.com

journals.sagepub.com

  • *Stewart, Blake (2020). «The Rise of Far-Right Civilizationism» (EPUB). Critical Sociology. 46 (7–8): 1207–1220. doi:10.1177/0896920519894051. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Acclaim for Murray’s thought has been widespread, and ranges from liberal French public intellectual Bernard Henri-Levy, who claimed him to be ‘one of the most important public intellectuals today’, to authoritarian anti-immigrant hardliners such as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who went so far as to promote The Strange Death of Europe on his Facebook page in Spring 2018... Murray’s book [The Madness of Crowds] remodels a much older theory of so-called ‘cultural Marxism’, which has long history in far-right thought. 
    • Kundnani, Arun (2012). «Blind spot? Security narratives and far-right violence». Security and Human Rights. 23 (2): 129–146. doi:10.1163/18750230-99900008. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. in January 2011, Douglas Murray, the associate director of the Henry Jackson Society, which influences the government on national security policy, stated that, in relation to the EDL: ‘If you were ever going to have a grassroots response from non-Muslims to Islamism, that would be how you’d want it, surely.’ … these statements suggest that ‘counterjihadist’ ideologies, through reworking far-right ideology and appropriating official discourse, are able to evade categorisation as a source of far-right violence. 
    • Murray and the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory: * Stewart, Blake (2020). «The Rise of Far-Right Civilizationism» (EPUB). Critical Sociology. 46 (7–8): 1207–1220. doi:10.1177/0896920519894051. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Acclaim for Murray’s thought has been widespread, and ranges from liberal French public intellectual Bernard Henri-Levy, who claimed him to be ‘one of the most important public intellectuals today’, to authoritarian anti-immigrant hardliners such as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who went so far as to promote The Strange Death of Europe on his Facebook page in Spring 2018... Murray’s book [The Madness of Crowds] remodels a much older theory of so-called ‘cultural Marxism’, which has long history in far-right thought. 

spectator.co.uk

standard.co.uk

tandfonline.com

  • Murray and the Eurabia conspiracy theory:
    • Pertwee, Ed (2020). «Donald Trump, the anti-Muslim far right and the new conservative revolution». Ethnic and Racial Studies. 43 (16): 211–230. doi:10.1080/01419870.2020.1749688Acessível livremente. Consultado em 2 de janeiro de 2021. Ye’Or’s Eurabia: the Euro-Arab Axis (2005) is the canonical work of the genre (Bangstad 2013; Larsson 2012), but extemporizations on her basic theme can be found in the work of many conservative writers during the late 2000s and 2010s, such as Melanie Phillips, Mark Steyn, Bruce Bawer, Christopher Caldwell, Douglas Murray and, more recently, Alt-Right-linked figures such as Lauren Southern and Raheem Kassam. The conclusive differentiator between counter-jihadist and more mainstream conservative laments about Western decline is the former’s decidedly conspiratorial framing... 
    • Murray described as Islamophobic:

theaustralian.com.au

theintercept.com

timesofisrael.com

web.archive.org