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Jonathan Bowden

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English political activist (1962–2012)
For the footballer, seeJon Bowden.
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Jonathan Bowden
Bowden speaking in December 2011. The topic wasYukio Mishima.
Born(1962-04-12)12 April 1962
Died29 March 2012(2012-03-29) (aged 49)
Alma materBirkbeck College,University of London

Jonathan David Anthony Bowden (12 April 1962 – 29 March 2012)[1] was an English political activist,orator, writer and artist. A member of theConservative Party in the early 1990s, he later became involved infar-right organisations, including theBritish National Party (BNP). Bowden has been described as a "cult figure" amongst the far-right movement, even more than a decade after his death.[2][3][4]

Life and career

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Early life and education

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Bowden was born inRoyal Tunbridge Wells inKent, and attendedPresentation College inReading, Berkshire.[5] He was anonly child. His mother, Dorothy Bowden, suffered from severe mental illness.[2]

In 1984 he completed one year of aBachelor of Arts history degree course atBirkbeck, University of London, as a mature student, but left without graduating. He enrolled atWolfson College, Cambridge, in 1988, but left after a few months. He became a lifelong friend of the novelistBill Hopkins (1928–2011), one of theangry young men, during this time.[6] Bowden was otherwise largely self-educated.[2]

Conservative Party

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Bowden began his career as a member of the Conservative Party in theparliamentary constituency ofBethnal Green and Stepney. In 1990 he joined theMonday Club, apressure group on the fringes of the party, and the following year made an unsuccessful bid to be elected onto the club's Executive Council. In 1991 he was appointed co-chairman, with Stuart Millson, of the club's media committee,[7] and was also active in theWestern Goals Institute.[8] In 1992 Bowden was expelled from the Monday Club.[9] (The Conservative Party disassociated itself from the Monday Club in 2001, and the club disbanded in 2024.)

Revolutionary Conservative Caucus

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Bowden and Millson co-founded theRevolutionary Conservative Caucus in November 1992[10] with the aim of introducing "abstract thought into the nether reaches of the Conservative and Unionist party".[8] It published a quarterly journal entitledThe Revolutionary Conservative Review. By the end of 1994 Millson and Bowden parted company and the group dissolved.

In 1993 Bowden publishedRight through the European Books Society. He was also reported to be a prominent figure in the creative milieu responsible for the emergence of the political magazineRight Now!.[11]

Freedom Party

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Bowden then joined the Freedom Party; he was its treasurer for a short time,[12] and subsequently was a member of the Bloomsbury Forum, alongside Adrian Davies.[13]

British National Party

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In 2003 Bowden joined the BNP. He was appointed Cultural Officer, a position that was created byNick Griffin, the party's leader at the time, to give Bowden an official role. In July 2007 Bowden resigned both his position and his membership after a dispute between him, Griffin and other individuals within the party. Although he gave speeches throughout England and Wales at local meetings for the BNP, he never re-joined the party, and cut all ties afterthe 2010 general election.[14]

Many of his speeches were recorded and have been transcribed. Topics of his lectures included philosophers, politicians, and historical literary figures who were prominent in the far-right. In late 2011 and early 2012 Bowden made 14 appearances on the AmericanWhite supremacistRichard B. Spencer'sVanguardpodcast.[14]

New Right

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New Right Committee
Formation16 January 2005
FoundersTroy Southgate, Jonathan Bowden, and Jonothon Boulter
Legal statusdefunct
Websitenew-right.org (archive)

The New Right Committee, or simply "New Right", was apan-European nationalist and far-rightthink tank founded by Bowden and the activistTroy Southgate. The name was a reference to the FrenchNouvelle Droite and the group was otherwise unrelated to the wider British and American usage of the term "New Right".

In March 2005 the group described itself on itsYahoo! Groups webpage: "We are opposed toliberalism,democracy andegalitarianism and fight to restore the eternal values and principles that have become submerged beneath the corrosive tsunami of the modern world."[15]

In June 2005 New Right announced that it would publishNew Imperium, a quarterly magazine it described as an "intellectual journal".[16] Bowden was the organisation's press officer.[17]

Death

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On 29 March 2012 Bowden died of a heart attack at his home, 14 days before his 50th birthday.[1] In 2011 he had been released from the psychiatric ward of a hospital, to which he wasinvoluntarily committed earlier that year after suffering amental breakdown.[2]

Views

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Bowden believed that some hierarchies are good for society, that "liberalism is moralsyphilis" and thatnative Europeans are justified in asserting their cultural, ethnic, psychological and spiritual hegemony over Europe.[2]

Bowden expressedpagan religious beliefs.[2]

Bibliography

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Works

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Filmography

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YearTitleStarringCredits
2001 (production)

2005 (release)

Venus FlytrapJonathan Bowden, Lisa Garner, Nicola Henry, Jane Robinson, Katie Willow, Nicole Wiseman and Claudia Minne BoyleDirected by Andrea Lioy

Produced by Jonathan Bowden

Screenplay by Jonathan Bowden and Andrea Lioy

Based upon the short story by Jonathan Bowden

2007 (production/release)Fenris Devours OdinWritten and narrated by Jonathan Bowden
2006 (production)

2009 (release)

Grand GuignolJonathan Bowden, Nicola Henry, Katie Willow, Michael Woodbridge and Lucy ZaraDirected by Andrea Lioy

Produced by Jonathan Bowden

Screenplay by Jonathan Bowden and Andrea Lioy

Based upon the play by Jonathan Bowden[18]

References

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  1. ^ab"Jonathan Bowden 1962-2012". Archived fromthe original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved25 April 2012.
  2. ^abcdefClements, Tom (4 September 2019)"I fell down the rabbit hole of alt-right propaganda and this is what I learned"The Independent
  3. ^Hawley, George; Marcy, Richard T.; Zúquete, José Pedro (31 May 2023). "Examining the performance and political influence of far right vanguard leaders: the case of Jonathan Bowden".Journal of Political Ideologies:1–19.doi:10.1080/13569317.2023.2219211.ISSN 1356-9317.S2CID 259036311.
  4. ^"Jonathan Bowden Is a Fascist for Our Postliterate Age".jacobin.com. Retrieved7 June 2025.
  5. ^Bowden, Jonathan (23 May 2012)."Credo: A Nietzschean Testament".Counter-Currents. Retrieved10 August 2022.
  6. ^"Bill Hopkins and the Angry Young Men". 6 July 2006. Retrieved23 July 2023.
  7. ^Monday Club News, July 1991 edition, p.2. – Monday Club Executive Council Minutes, 13 May 1991. This position did not, however, afford Bowden a seat on the Council
  8. ^ab"Interview with Bowden". Archived fromthe original on 7 August 2009.
  9. ^Sonia Gable and Adam Carter,"New Right chairman dies"Archived 21 November 2015 at theWayback Machine,Searchlight, 26 April 2012
  10. ^The Revolutionary Conservative, issue no.2, 1993, p.16.
  11. ^"Right Now! A Forum for Eugenecists".Searchlight. July 1998. Archived from the original on 28 March 2022. Retrieved22 October 2020 – via Institute for the Study of Academic Racism.
  12. ^"Freedom Party News". Freedom Party. 30 September 2006.
  13. ^"UNITED KINGDOM 2005". Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism. Archived fromthe original on 21 February 2009. Retrieved17 April 2024.
  14. ^abGeorge Hawley; Richard T. Marcy;José Pedro Zúquete (2023). "Examining the performance and political influence of far right vanguard leaders: the case of Jonathan Bowden".Journal of Political Ideologies.doi:10.1080/13569317.2023.2219211.
  15. ^"Yahoo! Groups : new_right". Archived fromthe original on 31 March 2005. Retrieved14 December 2020.
  16. ^"NEW IMPERIUM".Altermedia UK. Archived fromthe original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved14 December 2020.
  17. ^"New Right Committee". New Right. Archived from the original on 7 March 2007. Retrieved31 July 2023.
  18. ^"Films".The Jonathan Bowden Archive.

External links

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Wikiquote has quotations related toJonathan Bowden.

Further reading

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