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Redskin (subculture)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Communist or anarchist skinhead subculture
For other uses, seeRedskin (disambiguation).
Anarchist,anti-fascist andanti-racist skinheads inHannover,Germany
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Outline

In the context of theskinheadsubculture, aredskin is aMarxist skinhead, who often also subscribes toanarchist views. The term combines the wordred, (a slang term forsocialist orcommunist) with the wordskin, which is short for skinhead. Redskins take amilitantanti-fascist and pro-working class stance.

The most well-known organization associated with redskins isRed and Anarchist Skinheads (RASH). Other groups that have had redskin members includeAnti-Fascist Action,Red Action andSkinheads Against Racial Prejudice (although SHARP does not have an official ideology). Bands associated with redskins include:The Redskins,Angelic Upstarts,Blaggers I.T.A.,Kortatu,Skalariak,Banda Bassotti,The Burial,Negu Gorriak,Opció K-95,Los Fastidios,Kaos Urbano,Brigada Flores Magón,Núcleo Terco,Permanent Revolution, Pakhism Movement {Aritroism} faction andThe Press. One record label associated with the subculture isInsurgence Records.

History

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In the late 1970s and '80s, the skinhead subculture underwent a revival in western Europe. The origins of the skinhead subculture were largely apolitical, with working class youths in 1960's London who were influenced by similar working-class subcultures, like themods and the Jamaicanrude boys. In later decades, a new generation of skinheads came out of the punk subculture, emerging with a distinct style of music and dress. At this time, the skinhead subculture was made up overwhelmingly of working-class white men, and with the emergence of far-right political parties, such as the FrenchFront National and the BritishNational Front, around the same time, many skinheads adopted far-right andwhite supremacist views. In the coming decades, thesewhite power skinheads became widely known for racial hate crimes, to the point where popular media began to associate the entire skinhead subculture with racial violence.[1]In response to this, skinheads who held radical left-wing views, as well as skinheads who were members of minority groups who were being targeted by white supremacists, began forming organized opposition to white power skinheads, and the bands and political parties they supported. One such group was the Red Warriors, a youth gang of far-left skinheads who would physically confront white power skinheads in the streets, which often ended in violence.[2] The Red Warriors often acted as security for punk shows and left-wing activist groups, such asSCALP andSOS Racisme, who were often targeted with violence by white power skinheads. Over time, the Red Warriors, and other youth gangs with similar goals, became well known in France for their confrontational and violent methods for resisting fascists.[3] These "skinhead hunters" would later influence similar groups of far-left skinheads and anti-fascist groups, in France and around the world.[4]

References

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  1. ^"Ecuador: Nazi Groups A Disturbing Presence In Country".Notisur. University of New Mexico, Albuquerque NM. 2010-07-02.ISSN 1060-4189.Archived from the original on 2024-09-15. Retrieved2024-11-20.
  2. ^Bray, Mark (2017).Antifa: the Antifascist Handbook. Brooklyn, NY: Melville House Publishing. pp. 50–51.ISBN 978-1-61219-703-6.
  3. ^"ANTIFA - Chasseurs de Skins".Resistance Films. 2008.
  4. ^Vysotsky, Stanislav (November 2013)."The influence of threat on tactical choices of militant anti-fascist activists". pp. 263–294.
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