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E-raamat: Global Impact of the March on Rome

Edited by (University of Padua, Italy), Edited by (University of Padua, Italy), Edited by (University of Padua, Italy), Edited by (University of Padua, Italy)
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This comprehensive collection of essays provides a nuanced and multifaceted analysis of the global impact of the March on Rome, offering valuable insights into the spread and adaptation of Fascist ideologies in different cultural and political contexts beyond Italy in the 1920s and 1930s.



This comprehensive collection of essays provides a nuanced and multifaceted analysis of the global impact of the March on Rome, offering valuable insights into the spread and adaptation of Fascist ideologies in different cultural and political contexts beyond Italy in the 1920s and 1930s.

The chapters seek to contextualize the transformation of political cultures in 1920s Europe and provide a better understanding of the reasons for Fascism's success in the interwar world. By exploring these diverse perspectives and experiences, the book sheds light on the complex processes of ideological transfer, adaptation, and resistance that characterized the global reception of Fascism in the wake of the March on Rome. It underscores the importance of considering local contexts, transnational networks, and individual actors in tracing the trajectory of Fascist influence across Western and Eastern Europe, Latin America and the United States.

This book will appeal to an academic and scholarly audience at many levels, particularly in undergraduate and postgraduate courses on Italian and European History. Its accessible engagement of the broader issue of fascism and its transnational spread will also be of interest to a general readership interested in the history of Europe during the interwar period.

Introduction: The March on Rome a Century Later: New Research
Perspectives in Europe and Beyond Part 1: Rethinking the March on Rome in
Italy and Beyond
1. The March on Rome: Multiple Perceptions in Italy and
Beyond
2. War after the War: Fascism between Patriotic Remobilization and
Militarization of the Italian Society
3. Not Only Paramilitarism: Civic
Militias, Strikebreaking Groups, and the Long-Term Origins of Bourgeois Armed
Mobilization in Europe (ca. 1900s1923)
4. Colonial and Transnational
Perspectives on Paramilitarism and Fascism Part 2: The Western European
Impact of the March on Rome
5. Blue-blooded exuberance or Fascists? The
Impact of the March on Rome on the Radical Right in Britain (19221926)
6.
The Reception of Italian Fascism in France: Representations, Political
Relations, Transnational Dynamics
7. From the Putsch to the March: The March
on Rome as a Performative Model and the Transfer of Fascist Practices across
German-Speaking Interwar Europe
8. The Impact of the March on Rome on the
Early Nazi Movement, 19221925
9. Ramifications of the March on Rome in the
Weimar Republic: From the Media-Political Reception to the Brokering of
Fascism
10. Wilsonian Disappointment and Anti-Liberalism in Spain: The
Aftermath of the First World War, Fascism, and the Coup deìtat of Primo de
Rivera (19171923)
11. The March on Rome in Greece: Short-Term Reception and
Long-Term Impact
12. The Impact of the March on Rome in the Nordic Countries:
The Ideological Dilemma between Black and Red Revolutions Part 3: The
Reception of the March on Rome in Central and Eastern Europe
13. Hungary and
the March on Rome, an Event That Actually Changed Nothing
14. Fascism Goes
East Central Europe: Reactions to Romes March and the Evolution of Political
Culture in Interwar Poland (19221931)
15. Disciples of Italian
Authoritarianism: Anti-Democratic Romanian Great War Veterans and Their
Transnational Influences in the Interwar Era Part 4: The Impact of the March
beyond Europe
16. Threat or Resource? The Impact of the March on Rome among
the Italian Population in Tunisia: Perceptions, Reactions and
Instrumentalizations in a Peripheral Context
17. The March on Rome Seen from
the United States
18. Echoes of Fascism in Brazil under Getúlio Vargas
(19301945)
Giulia Albanese is Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Padua. Her research interests have focused primarily on fascism and authoritarian cultures. Among her works are The March on Rome: Violence and the Rise of Italian Fascism (2019) and Rethinking the History of Italian Fascism (2022).

Filippo Focardi is Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Padua. His research interests include the memory of Fascism and the Second World War in Italy and the politics of the memory of the European Union. Among his recent publications is The Bad German and the Good Italian: Removing the Guilt of the Second World War (2023).

Matteo Millan is Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Padua. His research interests include the history of Fascist squadrismo, armed associations, gun control, and gun cultures in modern Europe. His recent publications include The Blackshirts' Dictatorship: Armed Squads, Political Violence, and the Consolidation of Mussolinis Regime (2022) and the article Belle Époque in Arms? (2021).

Marco Mondini is Associate Professor of History of Conflicts at the University of Padua and Co-Director of the Centre International de Recherche sur la Guerre in Péronne. Among his recent publications are The Generalissimo: Luigi Cadorna and the Italian Army (2025) and Il ritorno della guerra (2024).