- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Social Sciences, Jurisprudence & Economy
- > Social Sciences
- > social sciences in general
Description
(Text)
Research for this project began when I was a doctoral student in Denton, Texas. I became interested in white supremacy during a graduate course dealing with Internet technology and communication. I found that groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and the National Alliance, among others, were active in the online environment. Having grown up in Texas, I was aware of underground Klan activities but I found it surprising that some Klan groups had sophisticated Web sites and were actively recruiting members. Eventually I discovered Stormfront.org and I wanted to find out if activists who attended rallies and other events had anything in common with their online counterparts. After spending two years in the field as an observer, conducting personal interviews, and making comparisons with Stormfront.org discussions, I discovered that strands of nationalist ideology permeate the contemporary movement and that similar issues drive personal activism in the field and in the online environment.
(Author portrait)
Dianne Dentice is Assistant Professor of Sociology at StephenF. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas. Her area ofresearch interest is social movements. Most recently her workfocused on the contemporary Ku Klux Klan. Currently she isexploring the southern movement and is particularly interested inCivil War re-enacting groups. Her forthcoming book, SaturatedBattlefields: Dimensions of Southern Identity is an in-depth lookat the re-enacting subculture. She co-edited Social Movements:Contemporary Perspectives for Cambridge Scholars Publishing andcontributed two chapters to the text.
(Author portrait)
Dentice, Dianne Dianne Dentice is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas. Her area of research interest is social movements. Most recently her work focused on the contemporary Ku Klux Klan. Currently she is exploring the southern movement and is particularly interested in Civil War re-enacting groups. Her forthcoming book, Saturated Battlefields: Dimensions of Southern Identity is an in-depth look at the re-enacting subculture. She co-edited Social Movements: Contemporary Perspectives for Cambridge Scholars Publishing and contributed two chapters to the text.