Misogyny, Racism, Power: Connecting the Dots in the Violent Far Right

Students gather on the UC Santa Barbara campus for a candlelight vigil on May 24, 2014. A 22-year-old man killed six people and wounded 14 after posting a lengthy manifesto and videos describing a “day of retribution” against women who he believed had sexually rejected him. (Spencer Weiner / Getty Images)

Editor’s note: This conversation with Cynthia Miller-Idriss about her new book, Man Up, is the final piece in Ms.’ three-part series exploring the links between misogyny, gendered violence and political extremism.


Jackson Katz: Throughout Man Up you talk about the many ways that misogyny intersects with racism and heterosexism in the world of violent far-right extremists. Can you briefly discuss some of the key overlaps?

Cynthia Miller-Idriss: Misogyny is threaded through nearly every mass shooting attack in some way, no matter who the targets are—so that’s one way it shows up. But we also see that feminism gets blamed for purportedly stripping away men’s opportunities, which easily bleeds into other conspiracies that explain how the deck is stacked against white men. Or a single umbrella conspiracy with multiple protagonists—like the “great replacement” [conspiracy theory]—blames Jews, Muslims and feminists all at once for supposedly orchestrating a replacement of white civilization through immigration, abortion, the disruption of the gender binary, and abandonment of white women’s “natural” roles as mothers and reproducers of the nation. 

The fact that so many domestically violent extremist attacks have both gendered and racialized dimensions shows that racism and misogyny are inseparable in the minds of many perpetrators, whether through rants about white birth rates in mass shootings targeting Black communities, or through hypersexualized tropes about supposed threats from racial, ethnic and religious minorities—as the Charleston church shooter said during his attack: “Y’all are raping our women.”

In deep and abiding ways, the scaffolding of patriarchy, misogyny and male entitlement (to power, to authority, to domestic labor, to women’s bodies) underpins the resurgence of white supremacy and other forms of far-right extremism. Different forms of hate rely on similar hierarchies of superiority and inferiority that are co-constituted and inextricable from each other.