The rise of the radical right can be understood as a reactive response to the various crises we have experienced in recent decades, a response that, as this book warns, has affinities and ties to fascism. But is there something more to its resonance? Is there only regression, or will some promise be reincarnated? What traits are shared by historical fascism and today's radical right, whether we call them ultra or extreme? Is hate speech responsible for disseminating such lethality today? And what about the left: have they abandoned their horizon of the future? Have they stopped contesting words and forms? How can we combat hate speech? How can we counter counterstrategies? These and other questions are the ones that haunt the authors of the texts collected here. As the title itself indicates, questions of language acquire primary relevance. It's not simply about promoting neologisms, ...read more