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The great dictators

Ur-fascism in Mussolini’s Italy
by
October 2009, no. 315

The Oxford Handbook of Fascism by R.J.B. Bosworth

Oxford University Press, $290 hb, 626 pp, 9780199291311

The great dictators

Ur-fascism in Mussolini’s Italy
by
October 2009, no. 315

In a delightful memoir of a boyhood spent in Mussolini’s Italy, Umberto Eco recalled that the heady days of the Liberation in his small town near Milan were encapsulated in the taste of Wrigley’s Spearmint, given by an African-American GI (New York Review of Books, 22 June 1995). After the years of ‘palefaces in blackshirts’, these Americans appeared like exotic time travellers from the future. At the same time, the boy discovered that, unlike the long-winded Duce, large slabs of whose bombast schoolchildren were expected to commit to heart, the leader of the local partisans addressed the cheering crowd in the piazza with a few well-chosen and rhetoric-free words. Equally astonishing was the discovery that newspapers could carry opinions other than those mandated by the state.

Judith Keene reviews ‘The Oxford Handbook of Fascism’ edited by R.J.B. Bosworth

The Oxford Handbook of Fascism

by R.J.B. Bosworth

Oxford University Press, $290 hb, 626 pp, 9780199291311

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