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Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915-1945
R. J. B. Bosworth לקטלוג
Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915-1945
In his extraordinary new book, Richard Bosworth brings to life the period in which Italians participated in one of the twentieth-century's largest , most notorious and ultimately most ruinous political experiments - Fascism - under their dictator, Benito Mussolini, and his henchmen. The Fascists were the first totalitarians, and they provided a model for many other twentieth-century dictatorships, Hitler's first among them.

A regime based on a cult of violence and obedience, Fascism made immense demands on its subjects, killing many within Italy and its empire and ruining the lives of more. And yet one of R.J.B. Bosworth's most striking accomplishments is to show the gap that yawned between rhetoric and reality. Mussolini's Italy is lumped together with Hitler's Germany as a nightmarish totalitarian state that brutally reengineered an entire society. In fact, Bosworth argues, Fascism, though monstrous enough, had a far shallower impact on Italy because Italy was still such a traditional, undeveloped country, organized around family, tribe and region, and because Italy's leaders were less ruthlessly ideological than the Nazis. Italians found many and ingenious ways of adopting, limiting, undermining and ridiculing Mussolini's ambitions for them. The heart of this book is its engagement with the life of these ordinary Italians, struggling through terrible times.


R.J.B Bosworth's prizewinning Mussolini was greeted on publication in 2002 as the definitive lifer of Il Duce. Bosworth is professor of history at the University of Western Australia and has been a Visiting Fellow at a number of institutions, including the Italian Academy at Columbia University, Clare Hall (Cambridge), Balliol College (Oxford), All Souls College (Oxford) and the University of Trento.