Editor | Kevin B. MacDonald |
---|---|
Categories | Political magazine |
Frequency | Quarterly |
Publisher | Charles Martel Society |
First issue | Fall 2001 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Website | Official website |
ISSN | 1539-3925 |
OCLC number | 49491983 |
The Occidental Quarterly is an American magazine published by the Charles Martel Society. Its stated purpose is to defend "the cultural, ethnic, and racial interests of Western European peoples" and examine "contemporary political, social, and demographic trends that impact the posterity of Western Civilization". Historian Tony Taylor described the publication as "a far-right racially obsessed US Magazine". Other sources have referred to it as white nationalist.David Frum and Max Blumenthal have called it pseudo-scholarly or pseudo-academic.
The journal is published by the Charles Martel Society (not to be confused with France's anti-Algerian Charles Martel Group), named in honor of Charles Martel, who halted a Muslim invasion of Europe at the Battle of Tours in 732.
The current editor of Occidental Quarterly is Kevin B. MacDonald. Its publisher is William Regnery II. Editorial advisory board members include Virginia Abernethy, Richard Lynn, James C. Russell and Kevin B. MacDonald.Jared Taylor, of the American Renaissance magazine, is a past member.Samuel T. Francis was an associate editor until his death.
In response to a critical essay by The American Prospect which said that "Sitting on the Occidental's advisory board is a who's who of the national anti-immigration movement", Regnery defended the editorial board, stating: "Of the thirteen individuals on its editorial board, ten hold Ph.D.s and two others are editors of their own publications. All are respected writers in their own fields."
They explicitly reject neoconservatism and call for a "third school" to emerge from paleoconservatism in the form of an ideology of Western European identity politics, and holds that the American political order of freedom and liberty is under ethnic and ideological threat. Its foreign policy positions, broadly, are anti-immigration with the exception of "selected people of European ancestry" and non-interventionism, including the rejection of influence from Israel and Mexico on U.S. politics.