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Italian fascism, 1919-1945

Philip Morgan
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors discuss the rise of Fascism in Italy, including the years of the Great Depression, the creation of the Fascist Empire, and the Axis Connection and the 'Fascization of Italian Society' during World War II.
Abstract
Acknowledgement - PART 1 THE CONQUEST OF POWER, 1919-1929 - The Postwar Crisis and the Rise of Fascism, 1919-1922 - Between 'Normalization' and 'Revolution', 1922-1925 - The Construction of the 'Totalitarian' State, 1925-1929 - PART 2 THE FASCIST REGIME, 1929-1936 - The Years of the Great Depression, 1929-1934 - The Creation of the Fascist Empire, 1935-1936 - PART 3 FASCIST EXPANSIONISM AT HOME AND ABROAD, 1936-1943 - The Axis Connection and the 'Fascistization of Italian Society, 1936-1940 - Fascist Italy at War, 1940-1943 - Epilogue: The Italian Social Republic, 1943-1945 - Footnotes - Map - Select Bibliography

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Major Power Intervention in International Crises, 1918-1988:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors test a set of hypotheses about the conditions under which major powers intervene with military support for states that are threatened in a crisis, using a gene-based approach.
Book

The Fascist experience in Italy

TL;DR: The authors examines the development of Italian Fascism, and surveys the themes and issues of the movement, spanning from the emergence of the united Italian state in the nineteenth century, to the post-war aftermath of fascism.
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Archaeologies of aspiration: historical archaeology in rural central Sicily

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the complexities of understanding the material effects and archival data related primarily to nineteenth-and twentieth-century rural landscapes and suggest that to understand this material within its historical context, it is necessary to identify aspirations and values related to the various overlapping as well as competing social groups with interests in the countryside, including large land owners and institutions, leaseholders and their associates, small landholders and landless peasants.
Journal ArticleDOI

The sacred synthesis: The ideological cohesion of fascist cultural policy

Roger Griffin
- 01 May 1998 - 
TL;DR: The authors argue that while many rival aesthetic creeds were accommodated under Mussolini's regime, they can all be seen as permutations of a common vision of the central role to be played by a culture in the regeneration of the national community and the creation of a new Italy.
Journal ArticleDOI

A New Consensus? Recent Research on Fascism in Europe, 1918–1945*

TL;DR: In this paper, historical research on European fascism since the 1980s has been surveyed, and the author argues that concepts and ideal types of fascism are to be considered heuristic devices which should integrate the fascist actors, their world-views, interpretations and appropriations of reality.