Benito Mussolini’s pronouncement in October 1925, willing “everything in the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State”, three years after the March on Rome had brought his Fascist Party (PNF) to power in Italy, set the stage for a dictatorship that intended to rule Italians ‘totally’. To deliver and maintain the Fascist revolution and its promised national regeneration, it would be necessary to permeate and fundamentally re-shape all aspects of Italian society and Italians’ daily lives. Mussolini’s formulation not only pointed to ‘ordinary’ Italians and their everyday worlds as key recipients of fascism’s ‘totalising’ project, but also tacitly recognised Italians as important potential constructors, and the everyday as ke...