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The Ethics of Consent—Regime and People in the Historiographies of Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2015
Extract
In his trenchant and stimulating review article Patrick Bernhard surveyed a series of English-language studies that focus in one way or another on the relationship between the fascist regime and the Italian people. Drawing on the historiography of Nazi Germany, Bernhard took these studies as his cue to argue that much of the historiography on Italian Fascism is outdated. In particular, he sees the approach adopted to assessing the regime's appeal as often old-fashioned, with the result that Italian historians have vastly underestimated ordinary Italians’ embrace of fascism and their complicity in its violence and war crimes. At the same time, he argues that histories of Nazi Germany and fascist Italy show far more parallels and intersections than have been acknowledged of late and calls on Italian historians to turn their attention to this entangled history.
- Type
- Roundtable on Italian Fascism: Responses to Patrick Bernhard's ‘Renarrating Italian Fascism: New Directions in the Historiography of a European Dictatorship’ (CEH, Vol. 23, No.1, February 2014)
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015
References
1 Bernhard, Patrick, ‘Renarrating Italian Fascism: New Directions in the Historiography of a European Dictatorship’, Contemporary European History, 23 (2014), 151–163CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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3 The reference to the Germans as ‘bad people’ is the reverse of the Italian tendency to view their own people as ‘good Italian people’ (italiani brava gente). I will address this Italian myth further on in the essay.
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15 Giulia Albanese and Roberta Pergher, eds. In the Society of Fascists.
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17 Much anticipated is Bernhard, Patrick's study Rasse und Raum transnational: Bevölkerungsmanagement in der “Achse” Rom-Berlin, 1936–43 (Munich: Oldenbourg, forthcoming 2015)Google Scholar.