The Fascist Revolution: Toward a General Theory of FascismH. Fertig, 1999 - 230 pages Synthesizing historian Mosse's (1918-99) life-long efforts to understand the nature of fascism, contains ten essays originally published between 1961 and 1996. He approaches the movement as a cultural phenomenon, and investigates how it and its adherents saw it and themselves. Among his subjects are fascist aesthetics, the French Revolution, fascism and the Intellectuals, the occult origins of National Socialism, and homosexuality and French fascism. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR |
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Page xi
... popular culture , but instead understood as dealing with life seen as a whole - a totality , as indeed the fascist movement sought to define itself . Cultural history centers above all upon the perceptions of men and women , and how ...
... popular culture , but instead understood as dealing with life seen as a whole - a totality , as indeed the fascist movement sought to define itself . Cultural history centers above all upon the perceptions of men and women , and how ...
Page 4
... popular consensus during the first years of fascism in power allowed it to develop a secret police — outside and above regular channels and procedures3 - as well as the special courts needed to reinforce its actions . This was easier in ...
... popular consensus during the first years of fascism in power allowed it to develop a secret police — outside and above regular channels and procedures3 - as well as the special courts needed to reinforce its actions . This was easier in ...
Page 11
... popular piety running through the nineteenth century and into twentieth - century Europe , and common to all nations . This background was vital for the cross - class appeal of National Socialism , and perhaps , despite a different ...
... popular piety running through the nineteenth century and into twentieth - century Europe , and common to all nations . This background was vital for the cross - class appeal of National Socialism , and perhaps , despite a different ...
Table des matières
Fascism and the French Revolution | 69 |
Fascism and the Intellectuals | 95 |
The Occult Origins of National Socialism | 117 |
Droits d'auteur | |
5 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
The Fascist Revolution: Toward a General Theory of Fascism George Lachmann Mosse Aucun aperçu disponible - 1999 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Adolf Hitler appeal artistic Aryan attempted attitudes avant garde beauty became bourgeois camaraderie Céline Christian civic religion counter-type creativity cult culture Degenerate Degenerate Art drama Drieu La Rochelle dynamic emphasis enemies Europe European example exhibition existed fascist aesthetic fascist intellectuals fascist movements festivals force France French fascist French Revolution Gentile George German National Gottfried Benn Guido von List historians Hitler Youth homosexuals human Ibid ideal ideas ideology important integral Italian fascism Italy Jacobin Je Suis Partout Jewish Jews Kampfbühne Langbehn leader liberal Lietz literature male mass modern morality Mosse Munich Mussolini mystical myth National Socialism National Socialist nationalist nature Nazi nineteenth century NS-Volksbühne Paris party past Paul de Lagarde play polemical political liturgy popular race racial racism reality régime Rembrandt Renzo De Felice revolutionary Robert Brasillach role Roman sexual society soul spiritual stereotype symbols Third Reich thought tion tradition virility volkish world view
Références à ce livre
Virginia Woolf and Fascism: Resisting the Dictators' Seduction Merry M. Pawlowski Aucun aperçu disponible - 2001 |
Writing Against Boundaries: Nationality, Ethnicity and Gender in the German ... Barbara Kosta,Helga Kraft Aucun aperçu disponible - 2003 |