The Life of A Splenglerian Visionary
The Life of A Splenglerian Visionary
The Life of A Splenglerian Visionary
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Dreamer of the Day:
Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International
Kevin Coogan
New York: Autonomedia, 1999
$16.95 US pbk
644 pp.
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T
he American writer Francis Parker Yockey has long enjoyed cult
status on the authoritarian fringe of the American far right.
That the first serious attempt at a study of his life and influence,
Kevin Coogan’s Dreamer of the Day, is the work of a left-anarchist is less
surprising considering that Yockey’s thought and activity often defied
left-right conventions. Coogan has researched this book extensively and
intensively, ferreting out numerous elusive facts and long-forgotten
rumors about his subject. The merit of Dreamer of the Day, however, is
weakened by a division of emphasis signaled in its subtitle, Francis
Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International.
Yockey’s mystique has rested in his chief work, Imperium, and in
his mysterious death in 1960. Coogan dispels much of the murk
surrounding Yockey’s death, in a San Francisco jail where he was being
held for passport fraud, by demonstrating that it was almost certainly
suicide. His treatment of Yockey’s 1948 historico-political manifesto is
less definitive, for Coogan has avoided a systematic descriptive and
analytical treatment of Imperium, by far the most substantial of Yockey’s
accomplishments. Instead, he has chosen to trace Yockey’s shadowy
and inconsequential efforts at revolutionary organizing, and to
illuminate various of Imperium’s ideas through their (often tenuous)
affinities to the thought and activities of a tenebrous group he calls “the
postwar fascist international.”
Coogan has done a passable job in researching the verifiable facts
of Yockey’s origins in solid, middle-class German stock. Born in 1917 in
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