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The Party and the People: Totalitarian States and Popular Opinion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2015

PAUL CORNER*
Affiliation:
Dipartimento di Scienze sociali, politiche e cognitive, University of Siena, Polo Mattioli – Via Mattioli, 10; paul.corner@unisi.it

Extract

In reply to Patrick Bernhard's critical review of my recent book I will make some brief general observations about the study of totalitarian and would-be totalitarian regimes.

Some preliminary remarks are necessary. Bernhard locates his review within the context of the debate over Italians' consensus for Fascism – a debate continuing in Italy, with highs and lows, since the mid-1970s. His own approach is clearly very much influenced by the methodologies of cultural history; he looks for emotions, sentiments, practices and experiences in order to form a picture of how Italians lived under the regime. He approves of the history that finds these. There is much to commend this approach, and I would certainly not argue against its value – cultural studies do, indeed, have a great deal to offer. But the methodology of cultural studies is not, and cannot be, the only approach, nor its absence the only criterion for criticism.

Type
Roundtable on Italian Fascism: Responses to Patrick Bernhard's ‘Renarrating Italian Fascism: New Directions in the Historiography of a European Dictatorship’ (CEH, Vol. 23, No.1, February 2014)
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

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References

1 Corner, Paul, The Fascist Party and Popular Opinion in Mussolini's Italy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Mann, Michael, Fascists (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 1213CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 Stephenson, Jill, Hitler's Home Front, Wurttemberg under the Nazis (London: Hambledon Continuum, 2006)Google Scholar.

4 For a selection of historians of this generation see Albanese, Giulia and Pergher, Roberta eds., In the Society of Fascists (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.