Fascism

Description

Social Science (Sociology and Political Science) Flashcards on Fascism, created by Nic Dane on 09/12/2016.
Nic Dane
Flashcards by Nic Dane, updated more than 1 year ago
Nic Dane
Created by Nic Dane over 7 years ago
7
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
Fascism: Why Should We Care? “Fascism was the major political innovation of the 20th century, and the source of much of its pain.” - Robert Paxton, The Anatomy of Fascism
The Origins of Fascism - Early twentieth century in Italy - Riots in Milan, spring 1919: violence, murder - Attack on socialism and the rule of law: in the name of the nation
Fascism: Some Features - ‘Fasces’: symbol of social unity under political leadership → Leadership is equivalent of the axe blade, social unity is equivalent of the wood - Totalitarian (state runs everything: it is the law, the judge, your family, etc.) - Reactionary (there is a mighty nation, and that mighty nation is led by a great leader, and that great leader is everything -- individuals, classes, and etc. are irrelevant) - Cult of leadership (identify with the leader)
Fascism: More Features - Mass mobilization through a monopolistic political party - Destruction of all intermediate organizations (such as trade unions) - Abolition of privacy - Rule of law replaced by arbitrary violence
Fascism: Background Ideas - Counter-Enlightenment (does not have scientific/logical backing, but only in human emotion) - Nationalism: nation comes first to morals, do whatever you must to care for the nation - Elitism: the group/individual that gets things done - Irrationalism: people need to believe the leader, and feel what they are feeling, it isn’t really logical
Mussolini’s Fascism - National unity - Liberalism ‘No’; Obedience ‘Yes’ - Celebration of war and violence - Individual sacrifice and state worship
Fascism: Hitler’s Nazism - The novelist Thomas Mann’s evaluation of the rise of Hitler - Two explanations for Hitler’s rise to power 1) Economic 2) Charismatic - Resentment about the end of WW1 - German people (‘Volk’) must defeat Jews, Communists, and Liberals who promote ideas of universal brotherhood - Need a strong, dominant leader (‘Fuhrerprinzip’) - Nationalism - Lebensraum (living space) → The Germans need more space, and need to be in control of more space - Social Darwinism (to Hitler, there is a master race -- eliminate them and you will be left with the best) - Racism and anti-semitism (under rooting basis for fascism)
Fascism: Key Themes (Robert Paxton) - Senses of crisis needing radical solution - Subordination of individuals to the group - One’s group is a victim whose enemies must be attacked - Fear of liberalism, class conflict, and other alien forces - Promote community integration by violence if necessary - Need for authority by natural (male) leaders embodying group’s destiny - Superiority of leader’s instincts over abstract and universal reason - Celebration of violence and will, when devoted to the group’s success - Right of the chosen people to dominate without restraint
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Socialism
Nic Dane
Multiculturalism
Nic Dane
Ecologism
Nic Dane
Feminism
Nic Dane
Rise of Fascism in Italy 1919-1922
Eva Clifton
Mussolini's Economic Policies 1925-1940
Eva Clifton
To what extent was Mussolini in control of Italy by 1928?
Eva Clifton
Early 1930s - Nazi Germany
IzzytheMuppet
Mussolini's rise to Power 1921-1922
Eva Clifton
Percent Review
swift768
Hamlet
kaylamp