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Fascism and Modernization: Some Addenda
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Extract
Henry Ashby Turner's recent suggestions concerning the analysis of fascism in terms of its relationship to the processes we have come to understand as “modernization” are too important and interesting to pass without critical comment. So much of what Turner says is persuasive that we run the risk of uncritically accepting what might be the chaff of his discussion along with its welcome substance.
There are at least two types of reservations with respect to Turner's account. One type turns on the general thesis he entertains; the second deals with the specifics of his argument.
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References
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50 In my The Fascist Persuasion in Radical Politics (Princeton 1974)Google Scholar, I have used the terms “fascist” and “fascistic” to cover the entire class of mass-mobilizing, developmental dictatorships under single-party auspices with the conviction that this use will outrage most of my colleagues. I am hopeful that such usage will also provoke my colleagues to reconsider some intuitive and commonsensical ordinary language classifications that suggest that the terms “fascist” and “Marxist” refer to mutually exclusive classes.
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