Maelstrom: Christian Dominionism and Far-Right Insurgence reviews the cyclical nature of right-wing resurgences in American history, dismisses the appropriateness of the word 'fascism' to explain them, and then describes in depth the goal of "reconstructing" American institutions on the basis of biblical principles.
James Aho is Professor Emeritus at Idaho State University where he has taught for over forty years. Recognized as a Distinguished Researcher and Teacher, he is the author of many books, including Far-Right Fantasy: A Sociology of American Religion and Politics, Body Matters: A Phenomenology of Sickness, Disease and Illness (co-written with his son, Kevin), and Sociological Trespasses: Interrogating Sin and Flesh. Aho is also the author of two award-winning studies of religiously motivated political violence, The Politics of Righteousness: Idaho Christian Patriotism and This Thing of Darkness: A Sociology of the Enemy.
Epigram
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 The Collection: A Study of Right-Wing Extremism
2 The American Far-Right: Historically and Sociologically
3 Christian Dominionism and Its Critics
Interlude 1: Fetus Fetish
4 Christian Dominionism and Violence
5 The Big Lie: Its Model, Making, and Motive
6 The Danse Macabre: Deadly Miscommunications
Interlude 2: God and Guns
7 The Case of the Minor Family
8 Revisiting Authoritarianism
9 'Fascism' Reconsidered
References
Index