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2020, Anthropological Theory Commons
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I myself remember how, in the 1930s, even in the midst of our anti-fascist engagement, we could only laugh at Mussolini's posturing and gesturesthe rigmarole of fascist ritual -without attempting to understand their true import'. (George L. Mosse) A crowd of men in black clothing filled the open area in front of the cemetery and stretched back down the road to the village. These were not mourners however, but celebrants, and at periodic intervals they raised their right arms, palms outstretched, and shouted 'a noi!', to general enthusiasm.
Journal of Modern Italian Studies, 2010
2013
The year 1937 marked the bimillenary of the birth of Augustus. With characteristic pomp and vigor, Benito Mussolini undertook numerous initiatives keyed to the occasion, including the opening of the Mostra Augustea della Romanità , the restoration of the Ara Pacis , and the reconstruction of Piazza Augusto Imperatore. New excavation campaigns were inaugurated at Augustan sites throughout the peninsula, while the state issued a series of commemorative stamps and medallions focused on ancient Rome. In the same year, Mussolini inaugurated an impressive square named Forum Imperii, situated within the Foro Mussoliniknown today as the Foro Italico, in celebration of the first anniversary of his Ethiopian conquest.
1992
The Anatomy of a Propaganda the Mostra della rivoluzione Event: fascista, On Fascist the morning of October 28, 1932, the tenth anniversary of the assumption of power, Benito Mussohni inaugurateci the most Fascist dictatorship. enduring propaganda event of the As the Duce reviewed the assembled honor guards and passed the cheering crowds open the doors of the Mostra invited Italians and foreigners alike to della rivoluzione fascista, Fascism to experience and participate in the regime 's representation of itself. The Mostra della rivoluzione fascista recreated, through a melange of art, documentation, relics and his- torical simulations, the years 1914 to 1922, as interpreted by Fascism in its tenth year in power. The exhibition's twenty-three rooms focused on each year from the beginning of World War I until October 1922 and crescendoed in a Sala del Duce and a Sacrario dei Martiri. While the show centered on the past, the actual focus was the future. The Mostra s celebrati...
Fast Capitalism, 2019
Journal of Contemporary History, 1996
Gržinić, Marina, Šuvaković, Miško, Stojnić, Aneta, eds. Regimes of Invisibility in Contemporary Art, Theory and Culture, MacMillan, 2017
As early as 1926, Mussolini shared his expectations for Italian art, declaring that on the "wellprepared ground" of Fascism "a new and great art can be reborn, that is both traditionalist and modern."ii He concluded his intervention asserting:
In the following article we will illustrate some of the most actual and fertile tendencies in the study of Italian fascism and of its relationship to culture. We will start off from the viewpoint that fascism in Italy succeeded in obtaining a high degree of popular support. Following Renzo De Felice, it could be argued that mass consenso (consensus) was crucial to Mussolini’s survival. Presenting itself as the only choice for the new Italy, fascism did thus in a very real sense reach a certain degree of –albeit unstable- gramscian egemonia (hegemony). The latter was in its turn the consequence not only of the use of force, but also of a careful orchestration of public life and, on a higher level, of aesthetics, of culture. Hence, in a second part of our study, we will turn to some of the most interesting, so-called ‘culturalist’, studies of fascist, mostly visual, culture. We will conclude with an analysis of Italian fascism as a form of secular myth, as a political religion in which the mentioned fascist aesthetics also played a crucial role.
Annali d'Italianistica 41 , 2023
Modern Italy, 2013
For many years Mussolini' s personality cult was viewed in a variety of mainly political ways. It was seen as 'an instrument of power' which served to justify personal rule and establish a way of conveying the meaning of Fascism to the multitude (Mack Smith 1981, 123). It was a tool for keeping leading Fascists in check and compelling them to engage in repeated public declarations of devotion to a leader whose popularity was greater than their own. It was also a system for regulating and organising the population since it was expressed in innumerable rituals and ceremonies. The cult was a factor of stability and a mechanism of social and political integration (Melograni 1976), but it was also linked to Fascism's efforts to enact an 'anthropological revolution' in Italy, to transform the Italians into a people of warriors and conquerors (Gentile 2002, 242-245). For Emilio Gentile, 'the glorification of the figure of Mussolini' established him as the pr...
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