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Information, Communication & Society

Volume 11, Issue 8, 2008

Special Issue:

‘STORMFRONT IS LIKE A SECOND HOME TO ME’

‘STORMFRONT IS LIKE A SECOND HOME TO ME’

On virtual community formation by right-wing extremists

DOI:
10.1080/13691180802266665
Willem De Kostera & Dick Houtmanb

pages 1155-1176

Available online: 05 Dec 2008

Abstract

Although the subject of extreme right virtual community formation is often discussed, an online ‘sense of community’ among right-wing extremists has not been systematically analysed. It is argued that to study this phenomenon and to understand its backgrounds and function, the offline and online experiences and actions of those involved need to be taken into account. For this purpose, qualitative data has been collected on the web forum ‘Stormfront’, supplemented by extensive online interviews with eleven of its members. It is demonstrated that those experiencing stigmatization in offline social life regard the forum as a virtual community that functions as an online refuge, whereas those who – because of special circumstances – do not experience offline stigmatization do not display an online sense of community. It is concluded that offline stigmatization underlies virtual community formation by Dutch right-wing extremists. Because this mechanism may have broader significance, additional hypotheses for future research are formulated.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Available online: 05 Dec 2008

Author affiliations

  • a Erasmus University Rotterdam, Sociology, Room M6-15, P.O. Box 1738, Rotterdam, DR, 3000, Netherlands E-mail:
  • b Erasmus University Rotterdam, Sociology, P.O. Box 1738, Rotterdam, DR, 3000, Netherlands

Author biographies

Willem de Koster (1984) is a Sociologist of Culture. Studying the relation between participation on online forums and offline questions of identity, he works as a PhD student at Erasmus University Rotterdam. More generally, he is interested in processes of cultural change in the west.

Dick Houtman (1963) is a Professor of Sociology of Culture at Erasmus University Rotterdam, and a member of the Amsterdam School for Social Science Research (ASSR). His principal research interest is cultural change in late modernity, with a focus on its political and religious ramifications. His latest books are Class and Politics in Contemporary Social Science, Aldine de Gruyter, New York, 2003, and Farewell to the Leftist Working Class, Transaction, New Brunswick, NJ, 2008.

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