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This book represents a valuable contribution to the history of the
Socialist Second International and, more generally, of European
socialism between the Great Depression of the 1880s and WWI. It
comes to fill a gap in the scholarship, insofar as it investigates
the history of the Socialist Youth International. During the first
phase of the making of socialist parties, this organization was in
charge of the political and cultural education of the proletarian
youth. Capitalizing on an approach based on social, quantitative
and political history, and on an analysis of mentalities and
languages, the book reconstructs the many-sidedness of the
“school of recruits” of the social-democratic and revolutionary
movements. The working conditions of youth in Europe, its
unionization and economic struggles, the fight against militarism,
the pedagogical work, the internationalism and the commitment to
maintain peace, and the attitude of young militants towards
Bolshevik revolution are some of the themes investigated in the
book. It also clarifies the role and the engagement with the issue
of the new generation shown by prominent figures of Marxism such as
Karl Liebknecht, Jean Jaurès, Henri De Man, Willi Münzenberg,
Henriette Roland Holst, and Robert Danneberg. Finally, the book
constitutes also a page of European social and political history,
reconstructed through the history of the various youth socialisms
and their relationship with the Marxist tradition.
Bringing together scholars from the Italian and English-speaking worlds, this book reviews the history of the memory and representation of Fascism after 1945. Ranging in their study from patriotic monuments to sado-masochistic films, the essays ask how, why and when Mussolini's dictatorship mattered after the event and so provide a fascinating study of the relationship between a traumatic past and the changing present and future.
Despite being separated by thousands of miles and shaped by
distinctive national histories, the countries of Spain, Italy, and
Argentina were intertwined in a variety of ways during the first
half of the twentieth century. This collection brings scholars from
each nation into conversation with one another to trace these
complex historical connections over the period of the two World
Wars. Deploying "Latinity" as a novel analytical framework, it
gives a broad and dynamic perspective on cases of reciprocal
exchange that include the influence of Italian Socialism on
Hispanophone leftists; the roots of Argentine liberalism in
Machiavelli and Spanish Nationalist thinkers; and the web of
connections among Italian Fascism, Argentine Nacionalismo, and
Spanish Francoism.
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