ABSTRACT

For Italian intellectuals, the terms fascist and antifascist continue to be the hard currency of contemporary political debate-to the point that if you are not one, you must be the other. When professor Renzo de Felice suggests that fascism describes a moment in the Italian past-and only that-he is challenging the very heart of current orthodoxy. The nature of his analysis of the recent Italian past is itself at odds with the traditional version, and represents a radical departure from conventional wisdom. De Felice's ideas about fascism have a broad signifi cance, quite apart from their importance in the contemporary Italian scene. Perhaps no one knows as much about fascism, and no one has given the subject such a rigorous historical analysis.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|7 pages

Seeking a Definition of Fascism

chapter 3|18 pages

General Characteristics of Fascism

chapter 5|10 pages

Fascism, Foreign Policy, and World War II

chapter 6|8 pages

True Examples of Fascism

chapter 7|11 pages

Fascism Today