Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany: The 'fascist' Style of Rule

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 1995 - History - 102 pages

The first integrated, comparative treatment of Nazism and Fascism, Alexander De Grand's study of fascism in Germany and Italy gives students a new and illuminating framework from which to approach both phenomena.

Well-known for his excellent general text on Italian facism, De Grand presents good coverage of domestic policy on issues such as women, youth and business and Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany:

* reconsiders the crisis of liberal democracy in Germany and Italy
* takes on recent revisionist debates without accepting their premises or conclusions
* covers four main themes: (i) the middle-class crisis in politics, (ii) the rise of the fascist state, (iii) the ideology of nation and (iv) the ideology of race.

De Grand's interdisciplinary approach puts economics and social considerations in the political framework and provides scholars and students of history, politics, and also sociology with an absolutely invaluable examination of these major movements.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction
1
The rise of fascism and nazism
10
The exercise of power
23
The new order
30
The status of the military
38
Agriculture
46
Culture and society
54
Consensus and coercion under fascism and nazism
75
Index
98
Copyright

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