Guillaume Faye

Guillaume Faye
Faye in 2015
Born(1949-11-07)7 November 1949
Angoulême, France
Died6 March 2019(2019-03-06) (aged 69)
Paris, France
Notable workArcheofuturism (1998), Why We Fight (2001)[4]
Notable ideas
New right[1][2]
Futurism
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Guillaume Faye (French: [ɡijom faj]; 7 November 1949 – 6 March 2019) was a French political theorist, journalist, writer, and leading member of the French New Right.[5][6]

Continuing the tradition of Giorgio Locchi,[3] his various articles and books sought to posit Islam as a nemesis necessary to unite the white non-Muslim peoples of Europe and the former Soviet Union into an entity named "Eurosiberia". Faye considered regional and national grievances to be counterproductive to this goal and was supportive of European integration.[7]

Scholar Stéphane François describes Faye as "pan-European revolutionary-conservative thinker who is at the origin of the renewal of the doctrinal corpus of the French Identitarian Right, and more broadly of the Euro-American Right, with the concept of 'archeofuturism'."[5]

  1. ^ Lamy 2016, pp. 274–275.
  2. ^ Jean-Yves Camus (2015). Les Faux-semblants du Front national, sociologie d'un parti politique (in French). Presses de Sciences Po.
  3. ^ a b François 2019, p. 92.
  4. ^ Maly 2022, p. 4.
  5. ^ a b François 2019.
  6. ^ Maly 2022, p. 3.
  7. ^ Bassin 2021.

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