Abstract
Introduction
In response to the data revolution and resurgence and mainstreaming of the far right, as well as the convergence of the two, in recent years, academic research and media attention have increasingly focused on the technological adaptation and sophistication displayed by the latter (Winter, 2019; Mondon and Winter, 2020). The greatest attention has been placed on the influence and impact of Web 2.0 (Miller-Idriss, 2020; Kakavand, 2022; Leidig, 2023), and particularly how groups and organizations are utilizing technological advancements and virtual networks to increase recruitment and radicalization and disseminate propaganda in non-centralized or “top-down” ways. The importance of understanding the ways in which such technology and social media platforms help such practices is well established, but history has shown that research emphasizing single “primary” factors that affect the impact of extremist activity, fails to recognize complex multifactorial and interrelated influences, including subcultural and organizational ones. Once, considerations of organizations as primary top-down drivers of far-right activity and mobilization served as a distraction from an exploration of more bottom-up and diffuse forms and modes of activity. In the past few years, however, this has been inverted, with a shift to research focused on dispersed, “bottom-up,” and individualized “lone-actor” aspects. This has similarly diverted attention from the examination of the role of traditional organizations, and their interactions with individuals, as well as different technologies and platforms.
For this reason, this article examines the less well-studied traditional and official white supremacist websites of the Ku Klux Klan, the most iconic of American far-right organizations, and their role and function as incubators for past, present, and future far-right recruitment, organization, strategies, and activism. In a sense, we are looking not at a hidden space of hate per se, but a public arena that has been obscured by the focus on both “new” movements, trends and technologies. Our analysis of 26 websites from the early 1990s to the present day offers a unique insight into the way that the Klan’s communication, recruitment, organization, strategies, and activism have developed and progressed with advances in technology. The results of this paper center on the following central elements of Klan political activism and community formation: Klan identity, organizational history, aims and objectives; technology and outreach, including online merchandise and event organization; and the constructions of whiteness and racism.
Literary Overview
The Far-Right Online
The World Wide Web is a global information infrastructure that currently underpins, reflects, and influences the economic, cultural, social, and political power, interactions, and formations of a large part of the global population. It depends on a simple model of information exchange, utilizing Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) to access resources and documents that have been formatted in the Hypertext Mark-Up Language (HTML; Kingdon & Ylitalo-James, 2023). This technology has seen innovation and evolved over time from the “Web of Documents”—or read only Web (Web 1.0), through the “Web of the People”—the read-write Web (Web 2.0), to the “Web of Linked Data”—the Web for machines (Web 3.0—The Semantic Web), and subsequently Web3—a series of open-source and interconnected decentralized applications powered by blockchain computing architecture (please see Hawes, 2023; O’Hara & Hall, 2021; for an in-depth description of the terminology).
As the Web evolved, so too did our economic, cultural, social, and political interactions and formations, including extremism, with many groups and organizations utilizing technological advancements and ever-expanding virtual networks to increase recruitment and advance radicalization on a global scale (Conway, 2017). It is widely accepted that the Web has become a virtual “forecourt” for the promotion of far-right ideology and activism, and influence on individuals receptive to recruitment and radicalization and their targets and victims (Daniels, 2009; Kingdon, 2021; Scrivens, 2021; Zempi & Awan, 2016). Analysis of the far right’s use of the Web to recruit and radicalize, as well as spread their ideas, has generally focused on the content featured on websites (Back, 2002; Blazak, 2001; Brown, 2009; Levin, 2002; Perry & Olsson, 2009), and Web forums (Bowman-Grieve, 2009; Caren et al., 2012; De Koster & Houtman, 2008; Lokmanoglu & Veilleux-Lepage, 2020), but less so on the history and operation of these for the movement, organization, and wider far-right and racist systems (see Daniels, 2009; Winter, 2019).
Studies into the influence of far-right social networks and their underlying technical structures indicate that the power of these networks stems from their operations and technical function, rather than from individuals using platforms to attract potential recruits (Caiani & Parenti, 2009; Holt et al, 2018; Meddaugh & Kay, 2009). Research has also demonstrated the ability for the far right to utilize the internet to aid in the construction of identity for organizations, as well as influence their mobilization, organizational contacts, and action strategies (Caiani & Parenti, 2013). Although literature has shown that online activity is universal, undertaken by individuals, and informal and formal networks, the focus of this article is on the websites and activity of organizations.
To date, a large amount of research on the far right, and that classified as extremism more generally, has concentrated on the present, exploring the use of new technological developments and trends (DeCook & Forestal, 2022; Jasser et al., 2021; Kingdon & Krause, 2021). However, the focus on extremist websites in these earlier studies has given way in recent years, (together with work on more traditional non-Web based communication), to a focus on social media and radicalization. While this may be a reflection of growing trends on the far right, and society more broadly, it now obscures the role that far-right organizations and websites play in communicating and shaping the extremist ecosystem—both online and offline—by overlooking the specificities of organizational communication, activity, and platforms. This also has the effect of disarticulating the longer history and strategies of official organizational communication (e.g., print ephemera) and presenting contemporary digital extremism as both more diffuse, and, as a pseudo “democratized,” bottom-up project. Instead, both facets must be understood as working together to shape the far right, their identity and activism. For this reason, this article will now turn to the past, and review the history of the Ku Klux Klan as an organization, how it operated and communicated its ideas, and how they related to social, political, cultural, and technological change.
The Ku Klux Klan: From Night Riding to Online Posting (A Short History)
The history of the Ku Klux Klan is organized into eras, of which there have been five, three formal and established eras (1–3) and two partially overlapping ones that were less concrete and centralized (4–5). In each era, the Klan emerged and mobilized in response to social and political developments, such as Reconstruction and Civil Rights. Such activity was, ultimately about the changing relationship between race, state, and nation, and the defense or preservation of whiteness in “America” as the Klan represented it. This informed and was articulated in new adaptations of their branding and ideology. In each era of mobilization, the Klan used new strategies and tactics including physical violence, public rallies and forms of communication used to propagandize, recruit, and sell their identity, ideas, and merchandise, such as manifestos, periodicals, and pamphlets (Winter, 2018). As the Web developed, the Klan expanded their communicative strategies to include websites and social media platforms, alongside these longer standing and more traditional mediums.
The Klan was founded by Nathan Bedford Forrest in Pulaski, Tennessee in 1865 as a social club for veterans of the Confederate army and became an explicitly political organization in 1868 (Winter, 2018). It provided an outlet and organized representation for white disenchantment, resentment, and opposition to the abolition of slavery, reconstruction, and “northern carpetbaggers” (Newton, 2014). The first-era Klan was organized according to local dens, but was unified as a southern movement in 1868, ending in 1873 following federal intervention (Chalmers, 2007). This period was immortalized in Thomas Dixon’s (1905) book
In 1915, the same year as the film’s release, “Colonel” William Joseph Simmons and five others established the second-era Klan at Georgia’s Stone Mountain. During this period, the organization was quite active and prolific in writing and publishing, including
The third-era Klan came into force in the 1950s in opposition to desegregation and continued to grow in opposition to Civil Rights in the 1960s (Ridgeway, 1990). The third-era represented a return to the organization’s southern, Confederate roots, being split across three factions:
The fifth-era began in 1981, overlapping with the fourth, and lasted until the mid-1990s. It was represented by the paramilitarization of more radical Klans who rejected their predecessor’s and Duke’s mainstream aspirations and strategies. They included Louis Beam Jr’s
While most of these organizations continued with printed ephemera, including Beam’s (1983)
Thomas Robb, National Director of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Christian Identity Minister, and editor of
Methodology
This research employed the epistemological position of interpretivism, utilizing qualitative research methods and non-probability data-gathering techniques to provide a comprehensive understanding of the historical and technological adaptation and evolution of Ku Klux Klan websites. It does so by examining its content based around a number of themes and areas over a period of social, political, and organizational change and technological development to understand the relationship between these. As interpretivist methods produce data that helps uncover meanings and insight, it was the most beneficial for this study. Methodologically, this research incorporated non-participation observation of online spaces and thematic analysis, taking an inductive approach, to allow for potential themes to emerge naturally from the data that was collected (Hennink et al., 2011). While research has previously investigated the activity and community formation present on Klan websites, these have either been limited to analyses of individual platforms (Selepak & Sutherland, 2012; Spicer, 2018; Waltman, 2003), or are snapshots of particular moments in time (Bostdorff, 2004; Gerstenfeld et al., 2003; Schmitz, 2016). This research adds value and insight to comparable work by offering a unique historical insight into the development and evolution of Klan websites, detailing how they have progressed and made use of Web 1.0, Web 2.0, and Web3 technologies.
Data Sampling
Due to the size, dimensions, and shifting dynamics of the Web, one of the greatest challenges to web-bases research is determining an appropriate population or content from which to draw a representative sample (Schafer, 2002). Therefore, non-probability sampling techniques were utilized to collect the most relevant data for this study. The other main rationale for this choice of sampling is that, as gaining access to extremist content can be difficult, information needs to be gathered from locations that are available (Litchman, 2014). Initially, convenience sampling was used, and data selected opportunistically based on its accessibility. It is the most suitable technique for research such as this, where members of the sample population, or the data is difficult to locate (Bryman, 2012). This research also employed purposive sampling, with the researcher collecting data based on their prior understanding of the research field and population. Due to the sensitive nature of this research, no structured inclusion criteria is included in the sampling strategy, although the exclusion criteria included any information shared by private accounts, or closed group conversations.
Data Collection
This research involved non-participant observation of online spaces and the collection of texts publicly available on 26 official Klan websites that had a temporal coverage significant enough that changes could be tracked over time (Table 1). The choice to collect this sample size centered on the fact that as data was collected manually, this would provide an appropriate amount of data so that trends could be tracked over time. Although computational methods of data collection have proven successful when analyzing white supremacist websites and forums, particularly via the use of linguistic inquiry and word count analysis 1 (Crabill, 2008; Figea et al, 2016; Weeda et al, 2022), this study was not solely concerned with content, but also the methods, technologies, and approaches employed by the users, creators, and hosts of the websites. Moreover, many Web-scraping technologies are employed to investigate bulk data via advance networks and textual analysis methods; as our study was inductive in nature, and predominantly collected via archives, this would not have been the most effective method.
List of Websites Used in Analysis Including Names, URLs, and Temporal Coverage.
The substantial list of websites that were chosen for analysis was partly drawn from Selepak’s (2011) doctoral thesis “
Data Analysis
The data chosen included that focused on three central elements of Klan political activism, community formation, and communication: Klan organization history and technological innovation; outreach, including recruitment, events, and merchandising; and constructions of whiteness and racism. The choice of these three areas was based on how they enabled analysis of the organization’s racial and political discourses and external engagement, and to map changes to and across websites over time and in conjunction with emergent technologies. Although content analysis would have been a feasible option for examination due to its reliable, objective, systematic, and quantitative breakdown of content, it is most suited to outlining the obvious and self-evident features of data, and not the hidden dimensions (Berelson, 1952). This research instead employed thematic analysis, as the most appropriate for identifying and analyzing patterns within the data collected, in an inductive way, from the ground up. The technique utilized bore resemblance to Braun and Clarke’s (2006) “Six Phases of Thematic Analysis,” although, in this research, the examination was recursive rather than linear. The process was implemented systematically, with each item of data examined individually, and care being taken to ensure the interpretation of later items were not influenced by earlier analyses. An outline of the codes and themes generated from our analysis can be seen in Table 2.
Themes and Codes Used in Analysis.
Ethical Considerations
This research received full ethical approval (ERGO/47657). The ethical implications that come from researching extremism and radicalization, particularly in relation to researcher safety, mental health, cybersecurity, and institutional responsibility have been carefully considered for this study and extensively discussed by the researchers in the following publications (Ashe et al., 2021; Mattheis & Kingdon, 2021; Winter, 2024). For this study, the principal ethical considerations were how to address concerns regarding anonymity and whether it would be ethically necessary to seek informed consent due to the fact this data was collected from websites, which raised questions as to whether such information would be considered “private” or “public” (Kingdon, 2021). We recognize that research conducted on websites should not be justified as ethical solely on the basis that it is in the public domain. Additionally, there are certain scenarios in which it would be necessary to seek unambiguous informed consent, such as accessing data that is specifically private, or including data from the accounts of individuals who are under the age of 18. Consequently, in this research, data was collected solely from accounts in the public domain, disseminated by the organizations themselves, and not individual users. Registration was not required to access the content, and data could thus be retrieved without interactions with members or other users (Sugiura et al, 2016). This obviated the need to get informed consent and circumvented other ethical issues such as the researcher clearly defining their intent to avoid deception, such as the creation of false identities or “sock puppet” accounts (Kingdon, 2021). Likewise, no information was collected from profiles in which users publicly stated they were younger than 18 (although user age may be almost impossible to ascertain), if it is not specified. In compliance with the general data protection regulations, this study also exercised particular vigilance in protecting the privacy of the content creators, and, although it was the organizations were seeking to communicate with a wider public audience, all data used was strictly anonymized and any identifiable information struck from analysis.
Results
The Klan as an Organization
The rhetoric, organizational rationale, and mobilizing imperative of the Klan is always predicated on the promotion and representation of whiteness and Christianity in the United States, and the relationship between these against perceived threats politically, legally, culturally, socially, economically, and demographically, most notably from other racialized groups and their alleged power and interests. But it does so in diverse and contrasting ways from Confederate “lost cause” constructions of whiteness, to European civilizational, nativist and white working-class ones.
Each website analyzed contained a detailed section dedicated to representing the history, rationale, operating logic, and aims of the organization. These centered on the definition and defense of whiteness, Christianity and America, as well as individual definitions of themselves. For example,
Two primary organizational identities and narratives emerged from the coding process. Firstly, the positioning and portrayal of the Klan as a fraternal organization, or “brotherhood” as demonstrated by
In a similar vein to Bostdorff (2004), this study also found that the community-building rhetoric offered by the Web enables the Klan to reach a wide audience at little cost, and thus attract individuals who desire a sense of community. Our analysis found that some websites advocate for cooperation with wider Klans, far-right movements, and white communities, while others are more restricted racially and/or ideologically. This indicates both the urgency of the perceived crisis for white Americans and their ideological position, as well as factionalism. For example, the
A key finding was that some Klan sites utilized the Web 1.0 practice of direct hyperlinks to connect to other Klan sites, creating a mesh of interrelated and contextually bound resources, which indicates that these groups have an organizational or working relationship with one another. Most notably the following websites:
Notably, Thomas Robb’s
Klan Outreach: Events and Merchandise
According to Selepak and Sutherland (2012), Klan organizations took steps to rebrand and mainstream their image similar to that of white, religious, and political conservatives. Our study found similar engagement via Klan outreach strategies. Most notably, the Klan engaged in outreach through organized events such as rallies, marches, and mass gatherings. Seven of the websites analyzed contained information about events for local chapters, including anniversary celebrations, anti-immigration rallies, marches in protest of job losses, BBQs, cross-lighting ceremonies, and the erection of crosses on public property, as well as pilgrimage tours of former plantations. From 1999 to 2011, it was commonplace for future events to be advertised on all websites, which often coalesced with certain racialized narratives. For example,
In addition to advertising events for local chapters, national events were also promoted. Notably, the
The far right has long engaged in merchandising to create group identity and affiliation markers, as well as raise revenue. In digital contexts specifically, “merchandising” is increasingly important because the entanglement of narrative and product consumption has become the essential function of digital and social media. Here, influence is mobilized to create informational “products” such as podcasts, vlogs, and streaming radio shows (Mattheis & Kingdon, 2023). Six of the websites analyzed sold merchandise directly to Klan members and the general public. These manifest in different ways, for example the
Common types of merchandise occurring across all sites include the following: artifacts from the original first-era Klan (leaflets, flyers, advertising materials); historical books/booklets (the original pre-script of the first-era Klan, the first decree of the Klan’s Constitution and Laws); memorabilia (calling cards, postcards, posters, window/bumper stickers); conspiratorial literature (Holocaust Denial, Zionist Occupied Government [ZOG] and other antisemitic theories, British Israelism, Christian Identity); clothing apparel (T-Shirts, shorts, bathing suits, hats, jewelry, pins, badges, watches, belt buckles, keychains, and patches); food and homeware items (plates, cutlery, aprons, oven gloves, utensils, stationary, mousepads, aprons, playing cards, and makeup). Importantly, much of the clothing apparel and homeware featured the Confederate battle flag, or traditional symbols to fascism, as well as Nordic. The diversity of material, iconography and sources of merchandise we can see across, as well as within, sites from traditional Klan to Identity and Odinist, and from Confederate to national to white European civilization level, is of importance. In many ways it signals and replicates ideological lines and recruitment strategies discussed earlier. Ideological fidelity and recruitment strategy may not be the determining factor though, as it may be linked to the space provided to populate sites with increasing volumes of potentially profitable merchandise in ways traditional printed material did not. So, the digital commodification of hate is big business for both extremists and the online platforms that host their products. Recommender and browse features have a significant influence on the range of content to which audiences are exposed, and, because such content is not restricted to clandestine areas of the Dark Web, or encrypted platforms, it instinctively appears more legitimate (Mattheis & Kingdon, 2023). This leads us to our analysis of the ways in which the Klan has capitalized on technology to aid recruitment and the advancement of their narratives.
Technological Innovation
While technology, as a topic and influence, runs through all the data and sections due to the nature of this being online communication, we feel that because the organizations, groups, and websites discuss it differently, it should be treated as a discreet section. The technology afforded by the Web allows for the transformation of information easily, reduces friction, and lowers barriers to exchange information. From the 1990s to the early 2000s, we observe that the Klan utilized Web 1.0 technologies in the traditional creator-publisher format, with websites designed to serve as online bulletin systems, host propaganda that was primarily cut/pasted from printed communication and advertise offline events and networking opportunities.
In the mid-2000s, there was a clear shift in the technological affordances of the websites, as the Klan adopted Web 2.0 technologies and more integration was offered. In addition to having static websites, the majority of organizations provided a number of additional services including links to social media, chatrooms, radio, television, and Web forms for direct communication. We also see writings from non-affiliated far-right ideologues, such as Jerome Corsi, Pat Buchanan and Rush Limbaugh with the latter’s show being advertised on the
Similarly, Caiani and Kroll (2015) who focused on the internationalization of the extreme right and found that the internet was used to attract new members with appealing websites and interactive elements such as survey’s, chats, and forums. This research found that the Klan utilized Web 2.0 technology to propagate new ideas among like-minded people and connect individuals and organizations by creating cyber-communities that transcend national borders. There was a clear evolution in the aesthetic of the websites, in the 1990s, the Hypertext Mark-Up Language (HTML; the early language for encoding simple document semantics), was centered on describing the documents—paragraphs, lists, fonts, titles—taking basic textual information and rendering it in a way that looks pleasing for the audience. In the early 2000s, we see the use of more precise style specifications and the creation of more design effects, including blinking text, crosses that burn, Confederate battle flags that fly in the background, and southern music that plays as you scroll. This progression from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0 technology helped transform the Klan into a community that catered to the wants and needs of different members.
The ability to engage with technological advancements is dependent on the skills and experience available. It is here that the technological capacity, organizational relations, and overlap discussed in previous sections come together. For example, the
In addition to hyperlinks and other issues already mentioned, technology is also intertwined with Klan outreach tactics in a range of ways, including the presence of contact email addresses, access to open and closed communication, discussion forums, membership forms, and donation stores. The latter is of particular importance, as efforts by organizations and activists to raise funds for their activities via the internet are longstanding. Twelve of the twenty-six websites had financing methods specifically for merchandise and were complete with translation and currency converters to help broaden markets. More specifically, the data highlights that the option to submit donations and pay for goods has transformed with advancements in technology, from Web 1.0 to Web3. Most notably,
Whiteness and Racism
As previously noted, each era of the Klan emerged in response to complex interactions between political developments and the Klan’s construction of threats to whiteness, the nation, and Christianity. In each era, the Klan used this matrix to reconstitute and rearticulate a perceived “crisis” for white Americans and the US in contemporary terms as a basis for recruiting members and mobilizing activists. For example, in the fifth-era, as the far right moved online, we saw a transition from what we term “TradKlan”—a traditional system supportive, possessive and defensive white supremacy and white Christian nationalism—to a more radical and insurgent, even fascist and anti-government one. The Web changed both the way the far right communicated and how they constructed and mobilized around whiteness, including how they used the internet to construct a unified, global, white identity and allowed particular narratives to develop and collect evidence across time and geographical space (Back et al., 1998; Perry & Scrivens, 2016; Winter, 2019).
In the data, terminology related to whiteness was a significant theme that emerged, which may be unsurprising for a white supremacist organization. What is unique, is how it changes over the period to reflect social and political conditions and strategic needs, as well as how seemingly contradictory discourses and narratives about whiteness co-exist within and across sites. One of the dominant ways that whiteness is constructed is through claims and narratives of white victimization, persecution, and loss of power in America, and globally. The victims of alleged reverse racism, Jewish conspiracies, hate crime, minoritization, and replacement. This is something that emerged in the fifth-era and has become mainstream in the current reactionary “culture war” across the west and global north.
Differences in ways that whiteness, and this predicament, is constructed and represented can be in terms of local, regional, or national identities or contexts in the US or globally, as well as across groups. It can even be a feature of mobilization and marketing strategies of the individual Klan groups. As noted earlier, the
The
The data also highlights the transnational nature of the Klan online. News stories are integrated from other countries identified as “white.” Examples include news articles referencing anti-white sentiment from the United Kingdom with headlines such as “
Conclusion
With this article, we have demonstrated that neither traditional organizations like the Klan, nor organizational websites have gone away, but have diversified and evolved. We have drawn upon and added to existing studies that have looked at the communication, community formation, and political outreach of the Klan and wider far right to show how the use of networked technology has enabled the Klan to grow beyond their traditional regional or national boundaries and connect internationally, adapt to changing needs, conditions and opportunities, as well as organize and mobilize offline. By obtaining a sample for each of the major online Klan groups, this paper has provided clear evidence that as new forms of communication have emerged, the Klan has adopted it to not only engage in outreach and communicate, but strategize, and raise funds through merchandising sales. Although there are limits to their technological adaptation. What is most unique and paradoxical about the Klan, as the oldest, most well established and iconic far-right organization, is the way they have adapted to new conditions, political demands, and technologies throughout their history, including as early adapters of the Web and websites, they largely rested on this as others have moved on to more advanced technologies. We believe that the history of the Klans’ use of websites is testament to their commitment to this technology and “tradition,” as well as resistance to technological trends that have seen the far right mainstream, but also fragment. Our focus on this and our findings serve to challenge the presentism of the research and counterextremism field and the assumption that the use of newer, more technologically advances platforms (which themselves are sometimes short lived unlike Klan websites) ought to be a focus to understand the threat.
This research also adds value and insight to comparable work by offering a unique historical insight into the evolution of Klan websites, detailing how they have made use of Web 1.0, Web 2.0, and Web3 technologies, and the way that interacts with their ideology and strategies. Our findings, although focused on the Klan and the US, are important internationally for several reasons. Firstly, as noted, the Klan is the largest and most established far-right organization historically, and the longest active, thus providing us with the most longitudinal data to assess longer term websites and online communication in a way that allows for the mapping of continuities, discontinuities, change and comparison. This knowledge can then be applied to other studies and context. Secondly, as highlighted in the introduction and survey of research themes (identify formation, recruitment, radicalization), and in the study itself (history, merchandising, race), what we are looking at is relevant to wider research and interest in digital hate, far right movements and online communication in different regional, national, and global contexts. This knowledge can help us understand how the Klan and similar organizations may adopt and use future technological innovations, or resist them, and thereby how we can best pick up on and counter online extremist activity, that may, on the outset, appear hidden. The embracing of new waves of communication technology also suggest a regular influx of new and younger members across each generation, which, in turn, provides useful information to help understand the diverse and changing nature and character of the far right and how it operates, communicates, competes, and mobilizes. Thirdly, theoretically, we show the theorization of digital hate and online communication is limited by technological and platform presentism, and a focus on social media and radicalization. As such, we argue that a long-term analysis of continuity and change on alternative and traditional platforms can help add to the wider theorization of online hate, the development of far-right discourses, identities, practices, strategies, and organizations. This occurs throughout the paper, but specifically in the analysis and insights provided by the data. In terms of its practical and policy uses, the research and analysis should encourage researchers, policy makers and stakeholders to pay greater attending to historical movements, historical change, different approaches to technology and communication and multi-tasking organizations, and a wider variety of operational logics than just the newest and most high profile. The longitudinal approach to data collection and analysis, which within far right research is only really possible by looking at Klan websites, has shown while there is less reliance on websites as there once were, there is more diversity in approaches, and they remain an important component of the contemporary far-right identity and community building, as well as the wider online far-right extremist and terrorist ecosystem.
