No Free Speech for Fascists explores the choice of anti-fascist protesters to demand that the opportunities for fascists to speak in public places are rescinded, as a question of history, law, and politics. It explains how the demand to no platform fascists emerged in 1970s Britain, as a limited exception to a left-wing tradition of support for free speech.
The book shows how no platform was intended to be applied narrowly, only to a right-wing politics that threatened everyone else. It contrasts the rival idea of opposition to hate speech that also emerged at the same time and is now embodied in European and British anti-discrimination laws. Both no platform and hate speech reject the American First Amendment tradition of free speech, but the ways in which they reject it are different. Behind no platform is not merely a limited range of political targets but a much greater scepticism about the role of the state. The book argues for an idea of no platform which takes on the electronic channels on which so much speech now takes place. It shows where a fascist element can be recognised within the much wider category of far-right speech.
This book will be of interest to activists and to those studying and researching political history, law, free speech, the far right, and anti-fascism. It sets out a philosophy of anti-fascism for a social media age.
Author(s): David Renton
Series: Routledge Studies in Fascism and the Far Right
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part I History
Chapter 2 Free Speech c. 1640–c. 1972
Chapter 3 The exception: Fascism and anti-fascism
Chapter 4 No platform in the UK 1972–1979
Chapter 5 A path not taken: The United States 1977–1979
Chapter 6 The right demands a respectful audience
Part II Law
Chapter 7 The wrongs of hate speech
Chapter 8 Hate speech, no platform, competing rights
Chapter 9 Hate speech and the state
Part III Politics
Chapter 10 The battle against hate speech goes online
Chapter 11 On being silenced, masculinity, victimhood
Chapter 12 The ideological capture of free speech
Chapter 13 Tactics for ANTI-fascists
Chapter 14 Conclusion
Index