<p>"Bold and far-reaching, <i>The Eurabia Myth</i> directly engages with French right-wing nationalist discourse and its demographic anxiety. Mehammed Amadeus Mack unpacks the genealogy and history of Great Replacement Theory to reveal the fallacies upon which Eurocentric xenophobia is based to provide a historically informed analysis of this repugnant white supremacist ideology." - Vinay Swamy, author of <i>Interpreting the Republic: Marginalization and Belonging in Contemporary French Novels and Films</i></p><p>"<i>The Eurabia Myth</i> makes a significant contribution to understanding far-right discourse in France that casts people of Arab and Muslim origin as 'invaders.' Mehammed Amadeus Mack sheds light on these controversies by making sexuality, especially 'marginal' sexualities, central to understanding the history and context of these debates and what they say about French identity, society, and culture." - Jarrod Hayes, author of <i>Queer Roots for the Diaspora: Ghosts in the Family Tree</i></p>

The roots-and reach-of “Great Replacement” theory in France and beyond​
 

The Eurabia Myth delves into the origins and evolution of far-right anxieties about the future of a Europe that welcomes postcolonial migration, racial and ethnic diversity, and tolerance of Islam. Nationalists deploy the specter of “Eurabia”-an Arabized and Islamized Europe-as a doomsday scenario of demographic replacement that only they can avert. Mehammed Amadeus Mack traces this dark vision to a sociopolitical conspiracy theory that began in France, spread throughout Europe, and has become especially virulent in the United States: Great Replacement Theory.

 

Examining how the Eurabia narrative gained traction, Mack analyzes dystopian fiction that envisions how this Replacement will take place, the contemporary politicization of medieval history, and ecofascist rhetoric depicting immigrants as an “invasive” species. He also interviews prominent French activists of color about how they subvert being portrayed as Replacers and destroyers of European civilization, and he explores the American echoes of the Great Replacement Theory.

 

Innovatively deploying gender and sexuality theory to the concept of Eurabia, Mack demonstrates that the demographic and racial anxieties underlying Great Replacement Theory are intertwined with a more fundamental crisis of masculinity, evident in the far right’s accusations that feminists and the LGBT community are responsible for the decline in white birth rates. As it uncovers the deeper roots of this pervasive theory, The Eurabia Myth shows its insidious relevance to a rising tide of nativist fear, hatred, and violence.

 

 

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Contents

Introduction: The Great Replacement Theory, from France to the United States and Back

1. Reactivating Menory: Charles Martel, France's Moorish Past, and the Crusader Mentality

2. Projecting Nonwhite Dystopia: Michel Houellebecq, Jean Raspail, and Douglas Murray

3. Men's Rights Movements and the Battle over Birthrates

4. Masculine Renewal and the Environment

5. Who Gets to Imagine the Future?

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781517919399
Publisert
2025-11-18
Utgiver
University of Minnesota Press
Vekt
680 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
416

Biografisk notat

Mehammed Mack is professor of French studies at Smith College. He is author of Sexagon: Muslims, France, and the Sexualization of National Culture.