I've posted before about the need for us to find our own heroes, rather than the same figures used by /leftypol/ and /pol/. There were a number of figures from the early 20th century and particularly the inter-war period who embraced the same unconventional politics which we do.
Though the arts are typically associated with the internationalist left, modernist literature and visual arts were actually inaugurated in equal part by artists who were of the third position and even downright reactionary.
One such fellow was the French author and doctor Louis-Ferdinand Céline, who was well known for his wild and feverish style, but was thrown down the memory hole after WW2 due to his status as a "collaborator". Céline wrote repeatedly through his career that he was a hardline racist and egalitarian, though he despised Jews and Bolshevism. Note that he was not a political theorist, simply an artist who made political statements. A few excerpts:
>I believe in a different Family Code [. . .].[8] A genuine code, which would include everything, beasts, goods, and people, children and elderly of France, in the same family, excluding Jews of course, one family, one father, dictatorial and respected. Therefore a respectable family where there would really be no more bastards, Cinderellas, neglected gingers, children’s penal colonies, or “Social Services,” where the soup would be the same for all, where there would be no favorites or rich kids, no chubby ones or little skinny ones, some having fun, others bending over. [. . .] Everyone in the same school! The families united, in short, all the families into one family, with equality of resources, of rights, of brotherhood, everyone having the national salary, on the order of 150 francs per day maximum [. . .]. Everything needs to be remade? Well then perfect! But [. . .] we must start everything over from childhood, through childhood, for all children. It is through this that racism begins and genuine communism too, through childhood and nothing else, through unanimous kindness, the desire that the entire family be beautiful, healthy, lively, Aryan, pure, redemptress, joyous with beauty, with strength, not only your little family, your own two, three, four brats, but the entire very French family [. . .]. Racism is family, family is equality, it’s all for one and one for all. [. . .] A common fate, no bastards, no black sheep, no stinking ones, in the same nation, the same race, no spoiled ones either, no little bosses. No more exploitation of man by man. No more wretched of the earth. [. . .] Marxism is well fucked, we are shaking up its major asset: the cold hearts of men.[9]
http://www.counter-currents.com/2015/10/celine-literary-giant-and-racial-nationalist/