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Italian Fascism

Italian Fascism. Global History and Geography Pojer/Steiker. Essential Question: How did Italian Fascism develop during the “age of culture and conflict” in the 1920s?. A Definition of Fascism.

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Italian Fascism

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  1. ItalianFascism Global History and Geography Pojer/Steiker

  2. Essential Question:How did Italian Fascism develop during the “age of culture and conflict” in the 1920s?

  3. A Definition of Fascism Fascism: totalitarian philosophy of government that glorifies the state and nation and assigns to the state control over every aspect of national life. The State not only is authority which governs and molds individual will with laws and values of spiritual life, but it is also power which makes its will prevail abroad….For the Fascist, everything is within the State and…neither individuals nor groups are outside the State...For Fascism, the State is an absolute, before which individuals or groups are only relative….Liberalism denied the State in the name of the individual; Fascism reasserts the rights of the State as expressing the real essence of the individual. -- Enciclopedia Italiana, 1932

  4. The Fasces Symbol • Latin word fasces. • In ancient Rome, the fasces were cylindrical bundles of wooden rods, tied tightly together around an axe • Symbol of unity and power

  5. TheCharacteristicsof Fascism

  6. 1. Ideology • extreme right-wing ideology • Celebrates nation or race as an organic community transcending all other loyalties • Powerful and continuing nationalism • Constant use of patriotic mottos, slogans, symbols, songs, etc. • Flags are seen everywhere.

  7. 2. Subordination to the State • Subordinates ALL aspects of society to its vision of organic community [usually through a totalitarian state] • Uses organized violence to suppress opposition • Glorification of force • Accepts the tenets of Social Darwinism • Anti-democratic

  8. 3. Cult of State Worship • Individual had no significance except as a member of the state • The fascists were taught: • Credere! [to believe] • Obbedire! [to obey] • Combattere! [to fight]

  9. 4. The Myth of Rebirth • “phoenix rising up from the ashes.” • Emphasis on national or racial rebirth after period of decline/destruction • Need for “spiritual revolution” against moral decay [individualism and materialism]. • Purge “alien” forces and groups that threaten the organic community

  10. 5. Militarism

  11. 6. Rampant Sexism • Male-dominated. • Traditional gender roles more rigid • Divorce, abortion & homosexuality suppressed • State ultimate guardian of the family institution

  12. 7. Identification of Enemies or Scapegoats as a Unifying Cause • People rallied into unifying patriotic frenzy over need to eliminate perceived common threat or foe • Foe = racial, ethnic, religious minority, liberals, communists, etc.

  13. 8. Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights • Fear of enemies and need for security persuades people to disregard human rights • People look the other way: • approve of torture • summary executions • long incarcerations of prisoners • assassinations, etc.

  14. Jews Are the Enemy!

  15. 9. Religion & GovernmentAre Intertwined • Use most common religion in nation as a tool to manipulate public opinion • Religious rhetoric, symbolism, mythology, etc., combine to support state policies [gives religious imprimatur to government policies!]

  16. 10. Disdain for Intellectuals & for the Arts • Promoted open hostility to higher education and academia • Censorship or arrests of Professors and other academics • Free expression openly attacked

  17. 11. Rampant Cronyism & Corruption • Fascist regimes governed by groups of friends and associates who appoint each to government positions • Group uses governmental power and authority to protect their friends from accountability • National resources/treasures appropriated or outright stolen by government leaders

  18. 12. Fraudulent Elections • Sometimes a complete sham! • Or, manipulated by smear campaigns against, or even assassination of, opposition candidates. • Use of legislation to control who can vote

  19. 13. Controlled Mass Media

  20. 14. Labor Power is Suppressed; Corporate Power is Protected • The organizing power of labor is the only real threat to a fascist government => suppression of labor unions, or independent unions are eliminated • Industrial and business aristocracy of a fascist state more often put government leaders into power • Creates a mutually beneficial business/government relationship and power elite!

  21. TheRise ofMussolini

  22. Immediate Post-WW I Italy • How was Fascism a product of a general feeling of anxiety and fear among the middle class of post-war Italy? • Fears regarding the survival of capitalism. • Economic depression. • The rise of a militant left. • National shame and humiliation at Italy’s poor treatment by the other Entente leaders after World War I [especially at Versailles].

  23. Immediate Post-WW I Italy • How did inflation and economic vulnerability impact a division among labor and business? • 1920 Italian Socialist Party organized militant strikes in Turin and other northern Italian industrial cities. • Economic chaos in north could spread to the rest of Italy! • Response: Hundreds of fascist groups developed throughout Italy •  “Black Shirts” [paramilitary squadriste] violently attacked the Socialists.

  24. Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) • Originally a Marxist. • By 1909 was convinced a national rather than an international revolution was necessary • Edited the Italian Socialist Party newspaper. Avanti! [Forward!].

  25. Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) • Became an interventionist. • Founded the newspaper Il Popolo d’Italia [The People of Italy] to encourage Italy to join the war.

  26. Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) • Editorial expressed: • War was turning point for Italy • Returning soldiers would form a new elite  new type of state. • Transformation of Italian politics and society!

  27. Mussolini Comes to Power • 1921 election: Fascists included political coalition bloc of P. M. Giovanni Giolitti’s government [win 35 seats]. • October, 1922  Mussolini threatened a coup d’etat. • “March on Rome”

  28. Mussolini Forms a Government • King Victor Emmanuel III refusal to sign law giving Italian military the ability to arrest the Fascists. • Invited Mussolini to joina coalition government withGiolitti. • 1925  Mussolini seized dictatorial powers during a political crisis

  29. The Fascists Consolidate Power(1925-1931) • New laws create the legal basis for official transformation into a single-party state: • Independent political parties & trade unions abolished • Freedom of the press curbed • Special courts created to persecute political opposition. • National police force created [with a secret police component].

  30. State “Corporatism” • 1926 The National Council of Corporations • Guilds of employers and employees established to manage 22 economic sectors • Supported by small capitalists, low-level bureaucrats, and the middle class • felt threatened by the rise of Socialist power! • Goal: harmonize the interests of workers, managers and the state by abolishing class warfare. • Reality: system retarded technological progress and destroyed workers’ rights

  31. The Lateran Accords (1929) • Settled long-running dispute over role of Catholic Church’s in Italian politics • Terms: • Papacy granted temporal sovereignty over Vatican City • Papacy guaranteed free exercise of Roman Catholicism as the sole state religion throughout Italy • Papacy accepted Italian sovereignty over the former Papal States

  32. The Lateran Treaty

  33. ItalianFascistPropaganda

  34. The Fascist Family Encouraged the development of large families

  35. Education • Let us salute the flag in the Roman fashion; hail to Italy; hail to Mussolini. • Nationalist Textbooks: • Common History: the glorious past of Ancient Romans. • Specific Geographic Borders: expressed geographic limitations imposed upon by neighbors • Common Enemy: limitation imposed by and by the West. • Common Future: imperial destiny of Italy’s future development

  36. Emphasis on Physical Fitness

  37. Anti-Semitism • 1930s  50,000 Italian Jews • Did NOT implement an extermination program in Italy. • 75% of Italian Jews survived World War II. • 8,000 died in German extermination camps. • 1938  anti-Semitic laws passed • Manifesto degli Scienziati Razzisti [The Manifesto of the Racist Scientists]. • Excluded foreign Jews [most of them were sent to German death camps]. • Forbade all Jews from teaching. • Excluded Jews from serving in the government or in the military.

  38. Gli Ebrei in Italia (1937) • Provided the intellectual premise for the 1938 racial laws. • Attacked Jews for: • Their alleged Zionist sympathies. • Their championing of degenerate avante-garde cultural expressions. • For their doubtful loyalty to the Fascist regime and its imperial claims.

  39. Mussolini Was Hitler’s Role Model

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