https://doi.org/10.1177/0011392119842257 Current Sociology 1–21 © The Author(s) 2019 Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions DOI: 10.1177/0011392119842257 journals.sagepub.com/home/csi CS What’s hate got to do with it? Right-wing movements and the hate stereotype Justin Everett Cobain Tetrault University of Alberta, Canada Abstract ‘Hate stereotyping’ occurs when researchers foreground negative emotions, especially hate, as motivating right-wing social movements, epitomized by labels like ‘hate group’. This convention contradicts empirical evidence showing that hateful feelings and ideological prejudices are mostly insignificant for attracting and retaining members in such movements. Using contemporary theories of hate, this article demonstrates the concept’s limits and misuse in studying and theorizing the political Right. For instance, hate’s theoretical and methodological ambiguity sometimes leads scholars to confuse hatred with right-wing ideology and prejudice, which can obfuscate findings and spur dubious generalizations across political groups. Moreover, some researchers accept post-structuralist theories of hate as a substitute for vital data on emotions, motivations and meaning-making among right-wing actors. Hate explanations persist because they appeal to ‘common sense’ about intolerance, not because of their methodological integrity for studying right- wing movements. By foregrounding intolerance, hate stereotyping risks sustaining the dominant narrative that prejudices such as racism are deviant, and that racism is a problem of bad attitudes and fringe ideologies, rather than larger issues of systemic and structural inequality. Keywords Emotions, extremism, far-right, hate group, hatred, populism, radicalism, right-wing, social movements, stereotypes Corresponding author: Justin Everett Cobain Tetrault, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, 5-21 HM Tory Building, Edmonton AB, T6G 2H4, Canada. Email: jtetraul@ualberta.ca 842257CSI 0 0 10.1177/0011392119842257Current SociologyTetrault research-article 2019 Article