Book Description
Although the mass totalitarian movements of Hitler's Germany and Mussolini's Italy may seem like historical aberrations, fascism could nevertheless make a comeback, albeit in different forms, predicts eminent historian Laqueur in this lucid, extremely useful survey. The countries of postcommunist eastern Europe, he believes, are a fertile ground for fascist political parties. He thinks that maniacal Russian ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky is "highly vulnerable" but cautions that anarchic conditions in the former Soviet Union favor a resurgence of extremist movements. "Clerical fascism," combining radical, militant Islamic fundamentalism with dictatorial government, widespread use of terror and anti-Western propaganda, as in Iran and Algeria, is "a colossus on feet of clay," declares Laqueur, yet he warns that it could cause havoc for years to come. He also astutely analyzes the postwar neofascist groups of France, Britain, Italy and Austria, which he describes as marked by irrational fear of immigrants, anti-Semitism, Holocaust denial and, often, belief in a world conspiracy against a master race. Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Table of Contents
Introduction 3
1 Fascism
The Essence of Fascism 13
Fascist Doctrine 21
The Leaders 27
The State and the Party 35
Fascism and the Church 41
Workers and Peasants 45
Terror 50
Propaganda 56
Fascists Culture 60
Achievements 65
The Joys of Daily Life 72
The Liquidation of Fascism 76
The Lessons of Fascism 83
2 Neofascism
Neofascist Ideology 93
Fascism and the Extreme Right: Some Case Studies 115
Right-Wing Extremism: An Alternative Way of Life 121
The Skinheads 125
The Fear of Immigrants 131
Anti-Semitism and Denial of the Holocaust 136
International Fascism 142
3 Postfascism
Clerical Fascism and the Third World 147
The Origins of Islamic Fundamentalism 164
Political Religion 169
Russia 178
Eastern Europe 197
Conclusion: The Prospects of Fascism 217
Notes 237
Bibliographical Note 241
Index 247
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