Fascisme selon mussolini biography
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A Museum of Fascism where Mussolini Was Born and Buried?
Faire de l’histoire publique du fascisme là où Mussolini est né et enterré? | Ein Faschismus-Museum an Mussolinis Geburts- und Begräbnisort?
By Noiret, Serge on •
Public Domain (WPUser Perkele, 2009)
Abstract: Historiography on fascism has sometimes sparked lively discussions in the, often sleepy, Italian academic historians community. However, narrating the history of fascism outside of academic books and engaging publically–and as historians–with opposing memories has still to be accomplished in a country still fearing its own past. Perhaps it is for this reason that the possibility of opening a public history museum that would feature the history of fascism is arousing strong public debate.[1] But Italy is mature enough to publically face even the most controversial and darkest moments of its history. Historians aren’t judges but skilled craftsmen of the past.
DOI: dx.doi.org/10.1515
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Umberto Eco’s List of the 14 Common Features of Fascism
Creative Commons image by Rob Bogaerts, via the National Archives in Holland
One of the key questions facing both journalists and loyal oppositions these days is how do we stay honest as euphemisms and trivializations take over the discourse? Can we use words like “fascism,” for example, with fidelity to the meaning of that word in world history? The term, after all, devolved decades after World War II into the trite expression fascist pig, writes Umberto Eco in his 1995 essay “Ur-Fascism,” “used by American radicals thirty years later to refer to a cop who did not approve of their smoking habits.” In the forties, on the other hand, the fight against fascism was a “moral duty for every good American.” (And every good Englishman and French partisan, he might have added.)
Eco grew up under Mussolini’s fascist regime, which “was certainly a dicta
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Syndicalisme fasciste
Le syndicalisme fasciste (qui est une forme dem national-syndicalisme) était un mouvement syndical issu du mouvement syndicaliste révolutionnaire, dirigé principalement par Edmondo Rossoni, Sergio Panunzio, Angelo Oliviero Olivetti, Michele Bianchi, Alceste dem Ambris, Paolo Orano, Massimo Rocca et Guido Pighetti, sous l’influence de Georges Sorel[1], considéré comme le « métaphysicien ni syndicalisme »[2]. fransk artikel syndicalistes fascistes se distinguaient des autres formes dem fascisme ett ce qu’ils favorisaient généralement la lutte des classes, les usines contrôlées par les travailleurs et l’hostilité envers fransk artikel industriels, ce qui conduisait les historiens à fransk artikel décrire comme des « idéalistes fascistes dem gauche » qui « différaient radicalement des fascistes de droite »[3]. Considéré généralement comme l'un des syndicalistes fascistes fransk artikel plus radicaux d'Italie, Edmondo Rossoni était le « principal représentant ni syndic