It has been a commonplace in Italian scolarship that Fascism enjoyed its long tenure not through terror but because of widespread popular consensus. By contrast a recent wave of research has reintroduced the notion of 'totalitarianism' to discussions of Mussolini's regime - yet often without testing the degree of active participation or opposition. So what was the relationship between Fascists and followers, party and people? Bringing together scolarship - much of it appearing for the first time in English - on both elites and ordinary people, this volume offers a wide-ranging, in-depth analysis of Italian society's involvement in Fascism
Ruth Ben-Ghiat's innovative cultural history of Mussolini's dictatorship is a provocative discussion...
On October 1922 Mussolini became head of the Italian government, a situation that would last for twe...
none2By drawing on theories of fascism and populism, this issue of Totalitarismus und Demokratie ex...
Benito Mussolini’s pronouncement in October 1925, willing “everything in the State, nothing outside ...
This book aims to retrace the main features of the twenty-year history of the Italian fascist regime...
The Social Conditions of Italian Fascism The article intends to prove, that the fascist movemen...
How can we describe and interpret interwar Italian Fascism, from a contemporary perspective? In what...
The book examines the development of the Fascist Party in Italian provinces during the course of the...
"The relationship between fascism und populism has scarcely been scrutinized on a social and ideolog...
The chapter analyses how the issue of fascism is dealt with by Italian extreme right-wing party act...
Hitler’s rise to power in 1933 was a fundamental litmus test for the Fascist regime. It represented ...
There is no need to recall that the very newspaper Benito Mussolini started his career as a Fascist ...
This paper summarizes the interpretations of fascism from the first half of the twentieth century. T...
AbstractThis paper argues that, in terms of their view of the 'people', leaderistic plebiscitarism a...
This article aims to reopen the historiographic debate on the Italian nobility during the Fascist re...
Ruth Ben-Ghiat's innovative cultural history of Mussolini's dictatorship is a provocative discussion...
On October 1922 Mussolini became head of the Italian government, a situation that would last for twe...
none2By drawing on theories of fascism and populism, this issue of Totalitarismus und Demokratie ex...
Benito Mussolini’s pronouncement in October 1925, willing “everything in the State, nothing outside ...
This book aims to retrace the main features of the twenty-year history of the Italian fascist regime...
The Social Conditions of Italian Fascism The article intends to prove, that the fascist movemen...
How can we describe and interpret interwar Italian Fascism, from a contemporary perspective? In what...
The book examines the development of the Fascist Party in Italian provinces during the course of the...
"The relationship between fascism und populism has scarcely been scrutinized on a social and ideolog...
The chapter analyses how the issue of fascism is dealt with by Italian extreme right-wing party act...
Hitler’s rise to power in 1933 was a fundamental litmus test for the Fascist regime. It represented ...
There is no need to recall that the very newspaper Benito Mussolini started his career as a Fascist ...
This paper summarizes the interpretations of fascism from the first half of the twentieth century. T...
AbstractThis paper argues that, in terms of their view of the 'people', leaderistic plebiscitarism a...
This article aims to reopen the historiographic debate on the Italian nobility during the Fascist re...
Ruth Ben-Ghiat's innovative cultural history of Mussolini's dictatorship is a provocative discussion...
On October 1922 Mussolini became head of the Italian government, a situation that would last for twe...
none2By drawing on theories of fascism and populism, this issue of Totalitarismus und Demokratie ex...