The Anatomy of a Propaganda the Mostra della rivoluzione Event: fascista, On Fascist the morning ... more 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...
This chapter examines how the specter of a demonic Communist enemy came to occupy a central place... more This chapter examines how the specter of a demonic Communist enemy came to occupy a central place in the Italian Fascist imaginary during the regime's mobilization of the politics of fear. Two critical periods in Italian Fascism's wars are discussed: the military participation on the Nationalist side in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), framed by the Fascist regime as a “holy war” against communism, and Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union (1941–1943). The chapter shows how Fascist propaganda depicted Italy's wartime enemies in a way that tapped into the deepest fears of many Italians and their feelings of uncertainty about issues such as family, morality, and the Church. Facing waning support and growing resistance, the regime found that terror and anxiety were more effective in forging a connection between it and the population than a defense of Fascism.
In this introduction to the special issue on transnational anti-communism, Marla Stone and Giulia... more In this introduction to the special issue on transnational anti-communism, Marla Stone and Giuliana Chamedes present the contours of a comparative approach to the study of anti-communism, raising issues of its origins and impact, and calling for attention to anti-communism as a discrete ideology with a defined set of beliefs and practices. The special issue of six articles, edited by Stone and Chamedes, focuses on anti-communism in the interwar period in a range of locations, including India under British rule, colonial Madagascar, Italy, France, Britain and the United States of America. The essays emphasize comparative issues regarding the emergence and consolidation of anti-communist movements and practices in the 1920s and 1930s, and they argue for the transnational and international character of interwar anti-communism, and for its profound implications for both national and global politics.
The Anatomy of a Propaganda the Mostra della rivoluzione Event: fascista, On Fascist the morning ... more 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...
This chapter examines how the specter of a demonic Communist enemy came to occupy a central place... more This chapter examines how the specter of a demonic Communist enemy came to occupy a central place in the Italian Fascist imaginary during the regime's mobilization of the politics of fear. Two critical periods in Italian Fascism's wars are discussed: the military participation on the Nationalist side in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), framed by the Fascist regime as a “holy war” against communism, and Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union (1941–1943). The chapter shows how Fascist propaganda depicted Italy's wartime enemies in a way that tapped into the deepest fears of many Italians and their feelings of uncertainty about issues such as family, morality, and the Church. Facing waning support and growing resistance, the regime found that terror and anxiety were more effective in forging a connection between it and the population than a defense of Fascism.
In this introduction to the special issue on transnational anti-communism, Marla Stone and Giulia... more In this introduction to the special issue on transnational anti-communism, Marla Stone and Giuliana Chamedes present the contours of a comparative approach to the study of anti-communism, raising issues of its origins and impact, and calling for attention to anti-communism as a discrete ideology with a defined set of beliefs and practices. The special issue of six articles, edited by Stone and Chamedes, focuses on anti-communism in the interwar period in a range of locations, including India under British rule, colonial Madagascar, Italy, France, Britain and the United States of America. The essays emphasize comparative issues regarding the emergence and consolidation of anti-communist movements and practices in the 1920s and 1930s, and they argue for the transnational and international character of interwar anti-communism, and for its profound implications for both national and global politics.
Uploads
Papers by Marla Stone