ABSTRACT

This volume charts the history of transnational and transatlantic fascism in East Central and Southeastern Europe, a lesser-known phenomenon that occurred throughout the twentieth century into the present.

Organizations and individuals in this part of the continent, under the influences of Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany, conceptualized their own forms of fascism in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. Due to the heterogenous nature of East Central Europe, fascism took various forms in the territories that prior to 1918 had belonged to the Habsburg, German, Russian, and Ottoman Empires. As a result, East Central Europe became a mosaic of fascist parties, organizations, and movements. During World War II, East Central and Southeastern European fascisms substantially contributed to collaboration with the Nazis and the genocide of the Jews. During the Cold War, East Central and Southeastern European fascists underwent multifaced aesthetic and ideological transformations in the Soviet Union and its satellites as well as in exile in the West. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the legacy of fascism re-emerged in the region, informing parts of the ideologies of various neo-fascist, radical nationalist, anti-Semitic, and national conservative parties and movements, as well as motivating communal politicians to erect monuments to fascists, war criminals, and anti-Semites.

With comprehensive coverage through a range of essays, this book is a helpful resource to scholars in European history, political history, and the study of fascism.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Title
Transnational Fascism
Size: 0.54 MB

part I|100 pages

Prewar

Title

chapter 1|19 pages

Understanding International Fascism

Title
Authoritarian Regimes and Fascist Movements in Romanian Far-Right Newspapers
Size: 0.56 MB

chapter 2|19 pages

The Contagion of Fascism

Title
Transnational Fascism, Interwar Latvia, and Pathways of Transmission
Size: 0.61 MB

chapter 3|22 pages

“Global Idea Expressed by Western Europe to Prevent Its Own Fall”

Title
Czech Fascism in a Transnational Perspective
Size: 0.58 MB

chapter 4|22 pages

Minority Affinities?

Title
The Sources of Fascist Appeal for Hungarian Minority Elites and Organizations
Size: 0.60 MB

chapter 5|16 pages

Money in Times of Crisis

Title
The Influence of the Great Depression on the Development of the Organisation of Ukrainian Nationalists on Emigration (1929–1933) 1
Size: 0.57 MB

part II|44 pages

Persecution, Violence, and Genocide

Title

chapter 6|18 pages

The Ukrainian Nationalists and the Holocaust

Title
Fascism, Genocidal Violence, and Collaboration
Size: 0.62 MB

chapter 7|24 pages

On Mass Killing, Martyrdom Culture, and the Body

Title
The Ustasha Regime as a Case Study in (Trans)National Fascist Violence 1
Size: 0.65 MB

part III|82 pages

Cold War and Transatlantic Fascism

Title

chapter 8|22 pages

Fascism in People's Poland

Title
The Complicated Afterlife of a Marginalized Phenomenon
Size: 0.65 MB

chapter 9|22 pages

Fascist Martyrdom for Export

Title
Fr. Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa (1925–2006) and the “Saints of the Communist Prisons” as a Transnational Movement in Post-Communist Romania
Size: 0.61 MB

chapter 10|19 pages

Hollow Words, Broken Promises

Title
The Ustaša, Ustašism, and the Croatian National Liberation Struggle during the Cold War
Size: 0.63 MB

chapter 11|17 pages

The Memory of Old Fascisms in New Spatial and Temporal Settings

Title
Celebrating Legionary Sacrifice in Francoist Spain
Size: 0.58 MB

part IV|82 pages

Post-Soviet Transatlantic Fascism

Title

chapter 12|21 pages

The Genie Out of the Bottle

Title
Engagement of the Argentinean-Croat Post-WWII Diaspora in Homeland Politics (1990–Today)
Size: 0.67 MB

chapter 13|22 pages

The Ideological Discourse of Putin's Russia

Title
Sovereigntism, Neo-Imperialism, and Fascism
Size: 0.60 MB

chapter 14|37 pages

“Fighters for the Freedom of Ukraine”

Title
Canada's Nazi Collaborator Monuments
Size: 1.45 MB