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Against Redemption - Democracy, Memory, and Literature in Post-Fascist Italy (Paperback)
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Against Redemption - Democracy, Memory, and Literature in Post-Fascist Italy (Paperback)
Series: World War II: The Global, Human, and Ethical Dimension
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Discloses the richness of ideas and sheds light on the controversy
that characterized the transition from fascism to democracy,
examining authors, works and memories that were subsequently
silenced by Cold War politics. How a shared memory of Fascism and
its cultural heritage took shape is still today the most disputed
question of modern Italy, crossing the boundaries between academic
and public discourse. Against Redemption concentrates on the
historical period in which disagreement was at its highest: the
transition between the downfall of Mussolini in July 1943 and the
victory of the Christian Democrats over the Left in the 1948
general elections. By dispelling the silence around the range of
opinion in the years before the ideological struggle fossilized
into Cold War oppositions, this book points to early postwar
literary practices as the main vehicle for intellectual dissent,
shedding new light on the role of cultural policies in
institutionalizing collective memory. During Italy's transition to
democracy competing narratives over the recent traumatic past
emerged and crystallized, depicting the country's break with
Mussolini's regime as a political and personal redemption from its
politics of exclusion and unrestrained use of violence. Conversely,
outstanding authors such as Elsa Morante, Carlo Levi, Alberto
Moravia and Curzio Malaparte, in close dialogue with remarkable but
now neglected figures, stressed the cultural continuity between the
new democracy and Fascism, igniting heated debates from opposite
political standpoints. Their works addressed questions such as the
working through of national defeat, Italian responsibility in WWII
and the Holocaust, revealing how the social, racial, and gender
biases that characterized Fascism survived after its demise and
haunted the new born democracy.
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