The Normalization of Far-Right Ideology in Norway: How Fringe Narratives Enter Mainstream Discourse
Resumen
N/A 15 years after the July 22, 2011, terrorist attacks in Norway, the ideological legacy continues to resonate across transnational digital spaces and domestic political discourse. This thesis examines how the core ideological concepts articulated in Anders Behring Breivik’s manifesto, specifically “Cultural Marxism”, “Islamization”, and “demographic replacement”, have been perpetuated, adapted, and normalized within Norwegian far-right milieus and mainstream discourse. Adopting a constructivist epistemology and utilizing Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) through the lens of the Discourse-Historical Approach (DHA), this study analyzes a targeted dataset gathered via Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT). The data spans fringe activist environments such as Stop Islamization of Norway (SIAN), alternative media platforms such as Document.no, and mainstream digital spaces, including TikTok and Facebook. The empirical findings reveal that while explicit support for political violence remains marginal, a profound process of linguistic sanitization and normalization has occurred. Ideological concepts have transitioned from dense, fringe manifestos into platform-specific, emotionally charged, and humor-masked vernaculars (such as "anti-woke" rhetoric and memes). This linguistic adaptation lowers social barriers to extremist thought, deepens societal polarization, and blurs the boundaries between marginal subcultures and mainstream political debate, presenting shifting challenges for international security studies.
Trabajo Fin de Máster
The Normalization of Far-Right Ideology in Norway: How Fringe Narratives Enter Mainstream DiscourseTitulación / Programa
Master in International Security ManagementMaterias/ categorías / ODS
MARPalabras Clave
N/ARight-Wing Extremism, Normalization & Mainstreaming, Ideological Concepts, DHA, OSINT, Norway, Digital Subcultures


