Results for ' fascists'

968 found
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  1. Fascism, liberalism and revolution.Danilo Breschi - 2012 - European Journal of Political Theory 11 (4):410-425.
    Marxist theory has always maintained that a strict continuity exists between liberalism and fascism, and has even proclaimed that there is a causal connection between the two. Therefore fascism comes to be portrayed as the ‘armed wing’ of the bourgeoisie. The Marxist thesis is weak for two reasons: first, because the connection between liberalism and fascism, though it doubtless exists, is considerably more complex, mediated and contradictory than it suggests; and second, because it axiomatically denies the revolutionary nature of fascism, (...)
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  2.  11
    Fascism, liberalism and Europeanism in the political thought of Bertrand de Jouvenel and Alfred Fabre-Luce.Daniel Knegt - 2017 - Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
    Despite the recent rise in studies that approach fascism as a transnational phenomenon, the links between fascism and internationalist intellectual currents have only received scant attention. This book explores the political thought of Bertrand de Jouvenel and Alfred Fabre-Luce, two French intellectuals, journalists and political writers who, from 1930 to the mid-1950s, moved between liberalism, fascism and Europeanism. Daniel Knegt argues that their longing for a united Europe was the driving force behind this ideological transformation-and that we can see in (...)
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  3.  2
    Addressing Fascism: A New Politics of Experience?Thaddeus D. Martin - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (5):152.
    (1) Background: The rise of fascism in American and, indeed, throughout the world, prompts a question: why does fascism remain persistent in human existence? The question is one that Karl Jaspers might have asked regarding the origin and goal of history. The political description of fascism is not adequate to describe the lived experience of those drawn to it, and to assume such people to be irrational does not suffice. Rather, culture provides semiotic structure, which is phenomenologically embodied by people (...)
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  4.  51
    How Fascism Works. The Politics of Us and Them.Jason Stanley - 2015 - New York USA: Random House.
    "As the child of refugees of World War II Europe and a renowned philosopher and scholar of propaganda, Jason Stanley has a deep understanding of how democratic societies can be vulnerable to fascism: Nations don't have to be fascist to suffer from fascist politics. In fact, fascism's roots have been present in the United States for more than a century. Alarmed by the pervasive rise of fascist tactics both at home and around the globe, Stanley focuses here on the structures (...)
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  5. The Fascist Regime: The Rise, Development, and Stabilization of Fascism in the Philippines.Regletto Aldrich Imbong - 2020 - Security and Democracy: Nexus, Convergence, and Intersections.
    The recent political developments in the Philippines require a reevaluation of the nature of the State under the Rodrigo Duterte regime. Just years ago, scholars illustrated the regime of Duterte to be a populist, illiberal, or authoritarian one. But since then, and especially during the pandemic, a lot of things have changed. In this paper, I will argue that Duterte’s regime is a fascist one. Unlike how Walden Bello characterized Duterte as a fascist original, a characterization laden with theoretical inconsistencies (...)
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  6. The fascist university of Bologna and Giovanni Gentile, an unpublished conference from 1930.Rossano Pancaldi - 2012 - Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 8 (1):82-124.
    In 1924 the Fascist University was founded in Bologna. This essay reconstructs the foundation of this study centre, its cultural purposes and contacts with the academic world Giovanni Gentile had frequent relations with this cultural centre. On March 9th, 1930 he participated in a crowded lecture making a speech that was to remain unknown. It is published here and analyzed in relation to his complete works and the reactions aroused in Bologna and in the national cultural environments. The essay ends (...)
     
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  7.  42
    Fascism – revolutionary departure to an alternative modernity? A response to Roger Griffin’s ‘Exploding the Continuum of History'.Richard Saage - 2012 - European Journal of Political Theory 11 (4):426-437.
    If one looks at the controversial premises of analytical approaches to fascism according to Roger Griffin, it is not surprising that a yawning distance has opened up between Marxist and non-Marxist schools of interpretation. In this situation whereby two camps are mutually ignorant of one another, it is certainly suggestive that the liberal British theoretician of fascism should put himself forward to play the role of a ‘mediator’, even if he faces the danger of significant criticism from both schools of (...)
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  8. Fascism, capitalism, modernity.Luciano Pellicani - 2012 - European Journal of Political Theory 11 (4):394-409.
    In this article I respond to the important questions raised by Roger Griffin and David D. Roberts by asserting the following points. First, that there is no justification to the position that the historical function of fascism was to establish the political hegemony of finance capital, as Marxist-Leninist scholars have maintained without providing a shred of evidence in support of their position. On the contrary, fascism was an epochal phenomenon which occured on several continents and had features which point to (...)
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  9.  99
    The Fascist Moment: Security, Exclusion, Extermination.Mark Neocleous - 2009 - Studies in Social Justice 3 (1):23-37.
    Security is cultivated and mobilized by enacting exclusionary practices, and exclusion is cultivated and realized on security grounds. This article explores the political dangers that lie in this connection, dangers which open the door to a fascist mobilization in the name of security. To do so the article first asks: what happens to our understanding of fascism if we view it through the lens of security? But then a far more interesting question emerges: what happens to our understanding of security (...)
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  10.  45
    Fascism, Marxism, and the Question of Modern Revolution.David D. Roberts - 2010 - European Journal of Political Theory 9 (2):183-201.
    Bitterly anti-Marxist though it was, fascism now appears to have been in some sense revolutionary in its own right, but this raises new questions about the meaning of modern revolution. In a recent essay Roger Griffin, a major authority on fascism, challenges Marxists and non-Marxists to engage in a dialogue that would deepen our understanding of the relationship between the Marxist-communist and fascist revolutionary directions. Although he finds openings within the Marxist tradition, Griffin insists that, if such dialogue is to (...)
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  11.  62
    Technology, war, and fascism.Herbert Marcuse - 1998 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Douglas Kellner.
    Acclaimed throughout the world as a philosopher of liberation and revolution, Herbert Marcuse is one of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century. His penetrating critiques of the ways modern technology produces forms of society and culture with oppressive modes of social control indicate his enduring significance in the contemporary moment. This collection of unpublished or uncollected essays, unfinished manuscripts, and correspondence between 1942 and 1951, provides Marcuse's exemplary attempts to link theory with practice, and develops ideas that can (...)
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  12. Fascism: A Warning.Madeleine Albright - 2018
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  13.  25
    Fascism as a recurring possibility: Zeev Sternhell, the anti-Enlightenment, and the intellectual history of European modernity.Tommaso Giordani - 2023 - History of European Ideas 49 (5):854-869.
    The article offers an overview and a critical assessment of the work of Zeev Sternhell, focussing on the questions of fascism and of the anti-Enlightenment tradition. It claims that the career of the Israeli historian revolves around the intuition of a history of European modernity marked by a central opposition: that between the Enlightenment and the anti-Enlightenment. I show how the idea is already present in his initial works, and argue that it produces a specific kind of intellectual history, concerned (...)
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  14.  16
    ‘Post-fascism’, or how the far right talks about itself: the 2022 Italian election campaign as a case study.Katy Brown & George Newth - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    While the mainstreaming of the far right is attracting growing scholarly interest based on its contemporary relevance, the role that far-right self-representation strategies play in this process has seen limited engagement. In this article, we argue that far-right actors employ a post-fascist logic to bring their ideas closer to the mainstream. This logic rests on a dual message, whereby they attempt to outwardly distance themselves from fascism while at the same time recontextualising fascist ideas. To explore these dynamics, we use (...)
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  15. Fascism as a Mass-Movement (1934).Arthur Rosenberg - 2012 - Historical Materialism 20 (1):144-189.
    Arthur Rosenberg’s remarkable essay, first published in 1934, was probably the most incisive historical analysis of the origins of fascism to emerge from the revolutionary Left in the interwar years. In contrast to the official Comintern line that fascism embodied the power of finance-capital, Rosenberg saw fascism as a descendant of the reactionary mass-movements of the late-nineteenth century. Those movements encompassed a new breed of nationalism that was ultra-patriotic, racist and violently opposed to the Left, and prefigured fascism in all (...)
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  16.  84
    Fascism as a Mass-Movement: Translator’s Introduction.Jairus Banaji - 2012 - Historical Materialism 20 (1):133-143.
    This Introduction to Rosenberg’s essay starts with a brief synopsis of his life, then summarises the key arguments of the essay itself before looking briefly at the twin issues of the social base of the fascist parties and the passive complicity/compliance of ‘ordinary Germans’, as the literature now terms whole sectors of the civilian population that were defined by their apathy or moral indifference to the horrors of the Nazi state.
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  17.  44
    Fascist Italy.R. J. B. Bosworth - 1999 - The European Legacy 4 (1):131-134.
    Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany: Comparisons and Contrasts, Edited by R. Bessel, (Cambridge University Press, 1996) 242 pp. £35 cloth, £12.95 paper. The Sacralization of Politics in Fascist Italy. By E. Gentile (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1996). 208 pp. $49.95 cloth.
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  18.  14
    The Seduction of Unreason: The Intellectual Romance with Fascism : from Nietzsche to Postmodernism.Richard Wolin - 2004 - Princeton University Press.
    An intellectual genealogy of the postmodern spirit, this book shows that postmodernism's infatuation with fascism has been widespread and not incidental. It calls into question postmodernism's claim to have inherited the mantle of the left - and suggests that postmodern thought has long been smitten with the opposite end of the political spectrum.
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  19.  12
    Technology, War and Fascism: Collected Papers of Herbert Marcuse, Volume 1.Douglas Kellner (ed.) - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    Herbert Marcuse is one of the most influential thinkers of our time. Born in Berlin, Marcuse studied philosophy with Husserl and Heidegger at the Universities of Freiburg and Berlin. Marcuse's critical social theory ingeniously fuses phenomenology, Freudian thought and Marxist theory; and provides a solid ground for his reputation as the most crucial figure inspiring the social activism and New Left politics of the 1960s and 1970s. The largely unpublished work collected in this volume makes clear the continuing relevance of (...)
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  20. Heidegger's Argument for Fascism.Neil Sinhababu - forthcoming - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.
    Heidegger’s ontological views, his observations about liberalism and fascism, and his evaluative commitments are three premises of an argument for fascism. The ontological premise is that integrated wholes and objects of a creator or user’s will are ontologically superior, as Being and Time suggests in discussing Being-a-whole, creating art, and using equipment. The social premise is that fascist societies are wholes integrated by dictatorial will, while liberal societies are looser aggregates of free individuals, as Heidegger describes in his 1930s seminars. (...)
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  21.  60
    Italian Fascism and Utopia.Charles Burdett - 2003 - History of the Human Sciences 16 (1):93-108.
    Considering a number of recent works on the ideology and culture of Fascism, the article explores how the concept of utopia, as formulated by different thinkers, can prove useful in attempting to unlock some of the mechanisms through which Fascism sought to manipulate the imagination and the aspirations of Italians. It focuses on the written accounts of writers and journalists who reported on the supposed achievements of the regime both in Italy and in the newly established colonies. It examines the (...)
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  22.  24
    The Fascist Seduction of Narrative: Walter Benjamin’s Historical Materialism Beyond Counter-Narrative.Tadashi Dozono - 2018 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 37 (5):513-527.
    This essay introduces Walter Benjamin’s historical materialism to illuminate how history teachers may invoke a critique of the past and present through democratizing the production of knowledge in the classroom. Historical materialism gives students access to the means of knowledge production and entrusts them with the task of generating a critique of politics though encounters with historical objects. The rise of the alt-right, alternative facts, and fake news sites necessitates social studies methods that intervene into the fascist seductions of narrative (...)
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  23.  19
    Volterra, Fascism, and France.Annalisa Capristo - 2015 - Science in Context 28 (4):637-674.
    ArgumentMy contribution focuses on two aspects strictly related each other. On one hand, the progressive marginalization of Volterra from Italian scientific and political life after the rise of Fascism – because of his public anti-Fascist stance, both as a senator and as a professor – until his definitive exclusion on racial grounds in 1938. On the other hand, the reactions of his French colleagues and friends to this ostracism, and the support he received from them. As it emerges from several (...)
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  24.  20
    Italian Fascism and the Portuguese Estado Novo: international claims and national resistance.Annarita Gori & Rita Almeida de Carvalho - 2020 - Intellectual History Review 30 (2):295-319.
    Taking into consideration the transnational dimension of Fascism that had its epicentre in Italy − as Mussolini’s purpose of “marching throughout the streets of Europe and the World” plainly illustrates − this article explores the connections between the Italian Fascist regime and the Portuguese Estado Novo during the interwar period. From the moment Fascism became attractive for Portuguese intellectuals, state officers, and politicians, until it became a colonial threat to the Portuguese empire, the cultural diplomacy apparatuses of the two countries (...)
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  25.  32
    Fascism in nowadays Brazil: On the topicality of Adorno’s Education after Auschwitz.Mauricio Rodrigues de Souza - 2022 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 42 (4):189-201.
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  26.  89
    Fascists, Freedom, and the Anti-State State.Alberto Toscano - 2021 - Historical Materialism 29 (4):3-21.
    Most theorisations of fascism, Marxist and otherwise, have taken for granted its idolatry of the state and phobia of freedom. This analytical common sense has also inhibited the identification of continuities with contemporary movements of the far Right, with their libertarian and anti-statist affectations, not to mention their embeddedness in neoliberal policies and subjectivities. Drawing on a range of diverse sources – from Johann Chapoutot’s histories of Nazi intellectuals to Ruth Wilson Gilmore’s theorisation of the anti-state state, and from Marcuse’s (...)
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  27.  79
    Fascism, Anti-Semitism, and Racism: An Ongoing Debate.Ilaria Pavan - 2013 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2013 (164):45-62.
    ExcerptThe debate about persecutory Fascist legislation, in its anti-Jewish and racial-colonial1 articulation, has represented one of the most innovative branches of historical research in Italy in the last twenty years.2 In 1988, the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the promulgation of anti-Jewish legislation marked the symbolic beginning of fruitful studies on the racial character of Fascism. It allowed the integration, development, and refinement of the research carried out for a long time only by Renzo De Felice and Meir Michaelis.3The (...)
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  28.  18
    Fascist ideas, practices and networks of ‘Empire’: Rethinking Interwar Italy as post-Habsburg history (1918–1938).Marco Bresciani - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (4):584-596.
    This chapter relates post-1918 Italy to the collapse of the Habsburg Empire and the ascent of the successor states, and analyses, from the Trieste’s vantage point, fascist projects, practices and networks of ‘empire’ in the Adriatic Sea, in Mitteleuropa and in the Balkans between 1918 and 1938. It focuses on three connected aspects. Firstly, the northern Adriatic was the first setting of the ascent of squadrismo, a model of violent action against ‘enemies within’ then replicated elsewhere. Secondly, Italian nationalism and (...)
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  29.  40
    Avant-garde fascism: the mobilization of myth, art, and culture in France, 1909-1939.Mark Antliff - 2007 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    Fascism, modernism and modernity -- The Jew as anti-artist : Georges Sorel and the aesthetics of the anti- Enlightenment -- La Cité française : Georges Valois, Le Corbusier and fascist theories of urbanism -- Machine primitives : Philippe Lamour and the fascist cult of youth -- Classical violence : Thierry Maulnier and the legacy of the Cercle Proudhon.
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  30.  32
    Fascism, Ethnic Cleansing, and the 'New Militarism': Assessing the Recent Historical Sociology of Michael Mann.Peter Baehr - 2007 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 10 (1):99-113.
  31. Fascism: What it Believes in and Aims at.Aline Lion - 1926 - Hibbert Journal 25:208.
     
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  32.  60
    Between myth and modernity: Fascism as anti-praxis.Daniel Woodley - 2012 - European Journal of Political Theory 11 (4):362-379.
    Revisionists have reclassified fascism as an autonomous revolutionary force based on the power of myth. Yet despite attempts to close the gap between materialist and culturalist readings, theories of fascism as the future-oriented projection of a mythic past overlook the point that, though intrinsic in the subjectification and deautonomization of the individual in collective-type societies, myths cannot be revolutionary because they derive their significance by projecting an idealized past that originates outside the emancipatory-developmental trajectory of modernity. Myths constitute a generic (...)
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  33.  25
    European Fascism.Michele Cone - 2005 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2005 (133):176-184.
    “If something begins when it acquires a name, we can date the beginnings of fascism precisely,” states the author of The Anatomy of Fascism, the Columbia University historian Robert Paxton, at the start of what is bound to be a controversial book (p. 24). Contradicting Zev Sternhell, the author of major books on fascism who has repeatedly named France as the intellectual cradle of fascism, Paxton asserts that Italy is where fascism started. The date was March 23, 1919, when Mussolini (...)
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  34. Relativism, Fascism, and the Question of Ethics in Constructivism.E. Glasersfeld - 2009 - Constructivist Foundations 4 (3):117-120.
     
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  35. The Fascist Persuasion in Radical Politics.A. James Gregor - 1976 - Science and Society 40 (1):100-103.
     
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  36. Was Fascism Revolutionary?Luciano Pellicani - 2002 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2002 (122):59-79.
     
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  37.  37
    Fascism and Post-National Europe: Drieu La Rochelle and Alain de Benoist.Alberto Spektorowski - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (1):115-138.
    The idea of a Europe of its peoples, or a post-nation-state ‘regionalist Europe’, is largely applauded by radical democratic and post-colonial theorists who considered this development an antidote to nationalism. What is hardly heeded by liberal as well as left-wing intellectuals, however, is that several fascist and neo-fascist intellectuals during the inter-war and the post-war eras have also been attracted by the idea of a post-nation-state, ‘Europe des peoples’. By analyzing the complementary ideologies of two French intellectuals associated with fascism (...)
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  38. Fascism.Özgür Yalçın - 2018 - Krisis 2:63-66.
  39.  61
    Fascism and the italian road to totalitarianism.Emilio Gentile - 2008 - Constellations 15 (3):291-302.
  40. Understanding Fascism?Michael Ignatieff - 1991 - In Isaiah Berlin, Edna Ullmann-Margalit & Avishai Margalit (eds.), Isaiah Berlin: a celebration. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 135--145.
  41.  33
    From Fascism to Faith.Joseph Pearce - 1997 - The Chesterton Review 23 (3):394-395.
  42.  52
    (1 other version)Fascism and the Primacy of the Political.Dick Pels - 1998 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1998 (110):39-70.
  43.  18
    Climate, Fascism, and Ibex: Experiments in Using Population Dynamics Modeling as a Historiographical Tool.Wilko Graf von Hardenberg - 2019 - Journal of the History of Biology 52 (3):463-483.
    In the interwar years the Gran Paradiso ibex population followed two subsequent, contrasting trends: a steady rise once the national park was established in 1922, followed by a precipitous fall after the Fascist regime took direct control of conservation in 1934, which almost led to the colony’s extinction. This paper addresses the issue of how models taken from population ecology may inform historical narratives. The data for the interwar years were analyzed using a statistical model based on climate and population (...)
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  44. The New Faces of Fascism: Populism and the Far Right.[author unknown] - 2019
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  45. Neo-fascist legal theory on trial: An interpretation of Carl Schmitt's defence at nuremberg from the perspective of Franz Neumann's critical theory of law.Michael Salter - 1999 - Res Publica 5 (2):161-193.
    This article addresses, from a Frankfurt School perspective on law identified with Franz Neumann and more recently Habermas, the attack upon the principles of war criminality formulated at the Nuremberg trials by the increasingly influential legal and political theory of Carl Schmitt. It also considers the contradictions within certain of the defence arguments that Schmitt himself resorted to when interrogated as a possible war crimes defendant at Nuremberg. The overall argument is that a distinctly internal, or “immanent”, form of critique (...)
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  46.  11
    Eco-fascists: how radical conservationists are destroying our natural heritage.Elizabeth Nickson - 2012 - New York: Broadside Books.
    An investigative reporter documents the destructive impact of the environmental movement in North America and beyond. When journalist Elizabeth Nickson sought to subdivide her twenty-eight acres on Salt Spring Island in the Pacific Northwest, she was confronted by the full force and power of the radical conservationists who had taken over the local zoning council. She soon discovered that she was not free to do what she wanted with her land, and that in the view of these arrogant stewards it (...)
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  47.  28
    Fascism after the end of history: An introduction.R. J. B. Bosworth - 1999 - The European Legacy 4 (1):1-7.
  48.  17
    Liberalism, fascism, or social democracy. social classes and the political origins of regimes in interwar Europe.Allen Douglas - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (4):639-641.
  49.  42
    Fascism" and the "Weekly Review.L. J. Filewood - 1976 - The Chesterton Review 3 (1):22-31.
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  50.  14
    Neo-fascism as the Apparatus of Neoliberalism’s Assault on Philippine Higher Education: Towards an Anti-Fascist Pedagogy.Gerardo Lanuza - 2022 - Kritike 16 (1):145-170.
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