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Richard Seymour: Disaster Nationalism (Hardcover, 2024, Verso Books)

The rise of the new far right has left the world grappling with a profound …

One of the best non-fiction in months

( em português, com trecho traduzido → sol2070.in/2025/05/livro-disaster-naionalism-teorias-conspiracao/ )

The term “disaster nationalism” refers to one of the faces of the current global rise of the far right, in which Brazil stands out — along with India, Hungary, the Philippines, and, of course, the US, Brazil and Bolsonarism are regular features in the book.

I came across the book through recommendations from people like Cory Doctorow, China Miéville, and Naomi Klein — the latter, in turn, has a very similar concept for the new far right, which she has dubbed “end-of-times fascism.”

What is striking about Seymour's analysis is its fluid, engaging, and eloquent quality — it is not an academic book — while at the same time overflowing with references and quotations. But that does not make it easy to read. Vivid descriptions of the violence of this extremism around the world often made me stop reading.

Among the topics are class conflict, disinformation, conspiracy theories, pornopolitics, the role of the internet, mass shooters, pogroms, and genocide. All in all, it is the terrain of the “downfall of liberal civilization,” as in the book's subtitle.

The author prefers to use the common denominator of the fanatical “nationalism” of these movements as a stage that precedes fascism itself. The “disasters,” on the other hand, refer to the fabrication of demons and enemies, based on very real crises and catastrophes, such as the climate emergency and multiple economic and social crises.

It is common for this fabrication of narratives not to be centrally orchestrated, but rather something more socially and psychologically organic, as the following excerpt explores.