Description
This volume offers a fresh and original collection of primary sources on interwar European fascist movements. These sources reflect new approaches to fascism that emphasise the practical, transnational experience of fascism as a social movement, contextualising ideological statements within the historical moments they were produced.
Divided into 18 geographically based chapters, contributors draw together the history of various fascist and right-wing movements, selecting sources that reflect themes such as transnational ties, aesthetics, violence, female activism, and the instrumentalisation of race, gender, and religion. Each chapter provides a chronological, narrative account of movements interspersed with complete primary sources, from political speeches, internal movement circulars and articles, police reports, oral history, songs and music, photographs, artworks, poetry, and anti-fascist sources. The volume as a whole seeks to introduce readers to the diversity of fascist groups across the continent, to show how fascist groups were constituted through social bonds, rather than around fixed ideologies, and to capture the inexperience and ad hoc character of early fascist groups.
With an Introduction that explains the volume’s theoretical approach and elaborates on the chronology of European fascism, this is the perfect sourcebook for any student of Modern European history and politics.
The book is accompanied by a free app, available for download for iOS and Android from: https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/it/app-directory/fascistmovements/
You can use the app to identify places where fascist groups were active during the 1920s and 1930s, and to get a glimpse of what life was like during ‘the age of fascism’. The app includes interactive maps, descriptions of 76 points of interest, and images for each point of interest.
Table of Contents
European Fascist Movements: An Introduction
Roland Clark and Tim Grady
1. Italy
Marco Bresciani
2. Germany
Tim Grady
3. Austria
Janek Wasserman
4. Belgium
Bruno De Wever
5. Britain
Louis Dean and Matthew Feldman
6. Croats
Goran Miljan
7. Finland
Marja Jalava
8. France
Chris Millington
9. Hungary
Rudolf Paksa
10. Ireland
Fearghal McGarry
11. Latvia
Paula A. Opperman
12. Netherlands
Nathaniël D. B. Kunkeler
13. Romania
Roland Clark
14. Slovaks
James Mace Ward
15. Spain
Judith Keene
16. Czechoslovakia’s Germans
Nancy M. Wingfield
17. Sweden
Nathaniël D. B. Kunkeler
18. Ukrainians
Per A. Rudling



