Title: FASCIST ITALY: Origins and Rise of the Fascist Movement
1FASCIST ITALY Origins and Rise of the Fascist
Movement
2Aims
- Place fascism in its Italian context
- Set out the origins of Mussolinis rise to power
- What did Mussolini do?
- What did others do/fail to do?
- Explore the complexity of fascism as historical
and political phenomenon - Critically address the ideological ambiguity of
Italian fascism
3Mussolini the Young Leftist Radical
4Mussolini the Dictator
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7Mussolini the Innovator
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11Mussolini the Man of the People
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13Mussolini the Statesman
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16Mussolini the Joke
17Mussolini the Dead Dictator
18Origins of Fascism
- Grievances from WWI
- Structural social weaknesses
- Structural political weaknesses
- Weakness of the Left
19Grievances from WWI
- The least of the great powers (R. Bosworth)
- Great War 1915-1918
- Versailles
- Fiume (Rijeka) and Dalmatia
- Veterans
- Last War of Independence First National War
20Structural social weaknesses
- Regionalism
- A National Identity?
- Economy
- Slow and uneven growth
- The Southern Question
- Mafia an alternative State
21Structural political weaknesses
- Legacy of 1861
- Trasformismo
- The political spectrum
- An inept Centre
- A new Right
- A divided Left
22The Left
- The PCI-PSI split
- Interpreting international events
- Interpreting the Italian context
23PART TWO MUSSOLINIS RISE TO POWER
24The Fascist Movement(s)
- The Fascio
- Ancient Roman Republican symbol
- FascioBundle or Group
- A variety of organisations
- Rooted in WWI
- Membership
- Students Ex-servicemen Urban Middle-Classes
25The Fasci di Combattimento
- Benito Mussolini
- Ideological path of a self-promoter
- From Anarchism to Fascism
- via Socialism
- The power of the Media
- From LAvanti to Il Popolo dItalia
- via WWI
26The 1919 Manifesto
- Universal Suffrage (from age 18)
- Abolition of the Senate
- 40-hour week and Minimum Wage
- Trade Unions representation in firm management
- Land for peasants
27Manifesto cont.
- A progressive tax on capital
- Active redistribution of wealth
- Seizure of religious property
- A National Militia
- Nationalizing the weapons industry
- Seizure of 85 of war profits from contractors
28Rise to power
- 1920-1925 from 2 to absolute power
- External events
- Passive Liberal governments
- Proportional representation
- Strikes and Land Occupation
- The financial problem
- Squadrismo
- Fascism as a paramilitary force
- The Popolo dItalia
29Early Fascism, an oxymoron?
- Revolutionary Fascism
- Anti-establishment
- Syndicalist
- Anti-clerical
- Republican
- Urban
- v. Reactionary Fascism
- Pro-establishment
- Ensuring Law and Order
- Catholic
- Monarchic
- Rural
Are there any points of contact?
30Mussolini
- Mussolini as synthesis of opposing trends
- M. needed the squadrismo
- To threaten stability
- To show strength
- But M. needed equally to deplore squadrismo
- To promise stability
- To appear reliable
- A masterfully ambiguous position.
31Rise to power
- May 1921 elections
- New Partito Nazionale Fascista gains 36 seats
- 28 October 1922
- March on Rome
- 30 October 1922
- King Vittorio Emanuele III invites Mussolini to
form the government
32Some questions on Fascisms seizure of power?
- Why did Liberal politicians not use force against
the fascist squads? - Why did the King ask Mussolini to become PM?
- Why was the Left incapable to stop him?
- An attempt to tame Fascism by bringing it into
the mainstream political fold.
33ConclusionFascisms mobilising themes
- Conservative social values
- Familism
- Catholicism
- Rhetoric of history, power and conquest
- Nationalism as the pursuit of National identity
34Conclusion cont.
- Fascism 1919-1925
- Long-term origins of Fascism
- Fascisms rise aided by
- The States mistakes, inability, unwillingness to
act - Tacit military support
- Bourgeoisies desire for Law and Order
- Failings of a bitterly divided Left
- From revolutionary movement to authoritarian
regime in defence of the social status quo
35NAMES
GABRIELE DANNUNZIO GIUSEPPE GIOLITTI AMEDEO
BORDIGA ANTONIO GRAMSCI FILIPPO MARINETTI
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