Stanislav Vysotsky, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
WHAT "antifa" IS NOT: Contrary to Donald Trump's irresponsible lie, 75-year old peace activist Martin Gugino is not part of "antifa" but rather several local groups in western NY advocating for peace, affordable housing. He did NOT "fake his fall" after being shoved by police and that's real blood dribbling out of his ears. |
President Donald Trump and some far-right activists and militants have claimed antifa is allegedly conspiring to foment violence amid the protests sweeping the U.S.
In my forthcoming book, “American Antifa: The Tactics, Culture, and Practice of Militant Antifascism,” I describe antifa as a decentralized collection of individual activists who mostly use nonviolent methods to achieve their ends.
Their goal is to resist the spread of fascism. That word can be an inexact term, but generally antifa activists see fascism as the violent enactment and enforcement of biological and social inequalities between people.
Opposed to violent supremacy
An anti-fascist protest in Berlin, 1928. Bundesarchiv, Bild 102-05976/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA |
They believe it is imperative to use violence to oppress and ultimately eliminate those groups.
In addition, they use violence to oppose their ideological enemies, even if they are from groups they believe are not inferior, such as heterosexual white men.
The initial anti-fascist movements were founded in Europe and North America between the world wars, and were primarily organized by anarchists, communists and socialists – three groups that were frequently targets of fascist violence.
The modern-day anti-fascist movement in the United States, including antifa, grew out of the Anti-Racist Action Network, a decentralized activist movement resisting racist skinhead subcultures and public demonstrations by neo-Nazi and Ku Klux Klan organizations in the 1980s and 1990s.
Anti-fascists’ objections aren’t simply that they disagree with fascists. Their problems with fascism are much more fundamental.
Personal and collective self-defense
The arts have long been a part of anti-fascist efforts, including by American singer-songwriter Woody Guthrie in the 1940s. Al Aumuller/NY World-Telegram & Sun/Lib. of Cong./Wikimedia Commons |
These anti-fascists, therefore, often see fascists as a threat to their personal existence, and their physical and emotional well-being – as well as presenting threats of violence or vandalism to their communities and shared gathering spaces.
They perceive their opposition as very much in personal and collective self-defense.
Because opposing fascism is a viewpoint rather than a formal organization, people’s actions vary widely.
Informal or everyday anti-fascism can include speaking out against bigotry, standing up for victims of fascist harassment or confronting fascists in public places.
Generally, these are relatively spontaneous actions that happen when anti-fascists encounter fascism in the normal course of their regular lives.
More formal anti-fascism can include large, well-funded mainstream organizations like the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center, who monitor fascist activity and provide the public information on its scope.
Local Action
Antifa members have taken part in the anti-racist marches that have emerged in cities nationwide. Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images |
These groups are rarely militant or violent. Most of them engage in commonly accepted forms of political activism.
For instance, anti-fascists often work to find out where fascist groups and people are active in an area, and then share that information with the wider community, bringing that activity to public attention.
Anti-fascist activists also take advantage of the general social stigma associated with being a fascist, and identify people who participate in fascist events or post fascist messages online.
Culture is another part of anti-fascist work, including art and music. By creating T-shirts and stickers with inclusive messages, and hosting concerts, film screening and art shows, anti-fascists work to create an environment of inclusion and equality that doesn’t directly attack fascism but simply exists in opposition to it.
Some direct confrontation
One of the largest examples of antifa direct confrontation, the D-Day landing at Normandy in World War II |
The varied and decentralized nature of anti-fascist efforts means it includes virtually anyone who opposes violent enforcement of social inequalities to engage in activism.
A diverse range of participants and tactics falls under the umbrella of a broad effort to stop fascism.
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Stanislav Vysotsky, Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminology, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.