Petro-masculinity: Fossil Fuels and Authoritarian Desire by Cara Daggett // Half Man (2026) // White Skin, Black Fuel: On the Dangers of Fossil Fascism by Andreas Malm // Zadie Smith’s introduction to Crash



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Petro-masculinity: Fossil Fuels and Authoritarian Desire by Cara Daggett // Half Man (2026) // White Skin, Black Fuel: On the Dangers of Fossil Fascism by Andreas Malm // Zadie Smith’s introduction to Crash

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Petro-masculinity and climate change denial among white, politically conservative American males
White, politically conservative males in the United States have been widely found to maintain petro-masculine attitudes that include aspects of racism, misogyny, and climate change denial.
These beliefs and their associated behaviors, including climate destructiveness, can be conceptualized as compensatory reactions to modern-day racial, gender, and climate-related anxieties that are experienced as threats to traditional white male privilege and power.
They then manifest as and energize authoritarian desires and their associated sociopolitical movements, including the current Republican effort to Make American Great Again.
This paper utilizes psychoanalytic concepts concerning individual and large-group identity, group psychodynamics and processes, and the intergenerational transmission of idealized myth and fantasy to further elucidate and expand upon these complex phenomena.
It then suggests specific strategies for disentangling the strong links between white hegemonic masculinity, fossil fuel use, and climate change denial, thus opening doors to alternative, non climate-destructive yet still empowering notions of individual, large-group, and national identity that are, instead, based in communal concern and climate care.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aps.1638
As the planet warms, new authoritarian movements in the West are embracing a toxic combination of climate denial, racism and misogyny.
Rather than consider these resentments separately, this article interrogates their relationship through the concept of petro-masculinity, which appreciates the historic role of fossil fuel systems in buttressing white patriarchal rule. Petro-masculinity is helpful to understanding how the anxieties aroused by the Anthropocene can augment desires for authoritarianism. The concept of petro-masculinity suggests that fossil fuels mean more than profit; fossil fuels also contribute to making identities, which poses risks for post-carbon energy politics. Moreover, through a psycho-political reading of authoritarianism, I show how fossil fuel use can function as a violent compensatory practice in reaction to gender and climate trouble.