ファシズム - Wikipedia
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ファシズム(英: fascism、伊: fascismo)は、イタリアのムッソリーニと国家ファシスト党(立命館大名誉教授の山口定さん死去 ファシズム研究
2013年11月20日04時55分
ファシズム研究で知られる。著書に「ファシズム」「政治体制」など。
2011.1
Fascism
ISBN13: 9780192892492ISBN10: 0192892495Paperback, 432 pages
Jul 1995, In Stock
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Description
No political ideology has had a greater impact on modern history, or caused more intellectual controversy, than fascism. It has been identified with totalitarianism, state terror, fanaticism, orchestrated violence, and blind obedience, and was directly associated with the horrors of the Second World War, which left more than 40 million dead and introduced inconceivable notions of inhumanity. The mere mention of the term today evokes visions of atrocities and ineffable cruelty. Yet, the end of the twentieth century appears to have spawned a renewed interest in fascism, suggesting that it is time for us to examine our understanding of its ideas, ideals, and inequities.Edited by Roger Griffin, described as 'the premier theorist {of fascism} of the younger generation' (Contemporary European History ), this important Oxford Reader demonstrates why fascism strongly appeals to many people, and how dangerous the result of this fascination may be. It includes a wide selection of texts written by fascist thinkers and propagandists, as well as by prominent anti-fascists from both inside and outside Europe, before and after the Second World War. Included are texts on fascism in Germany and Italy, on the abortive pre-1945 fascisms in more than a dozen countries around the world, on reactions to fascism, and on post-war and contemporary fascism. With contributions from writers as diverse as Benito Mussolini and Primo Levi, Joseph Goebbels and George Orwell, Martin Heidegger and Max Horkheimer, this compelling anthology provides insight into the depths and breadths of the destructive repercussions of fascist ideology. In no other volume will students of political theory, history, sociology, and psychology have access to such a compendium of key texts on this simultaneoulsy intriguing and frightening political force.
About the Author(s)
Roger Griffin is the author of several studies of fascism, including The Nature of Fascism (1991, 1993), and contributor to Contemporary Political Ideologies (1993). He is Principal Lecturer in the Department of History at Oxford Brookes University.
Table of Contents
General Introduction
PART I: FASCISM IN ITALY
Introduction
A. Fascism as an Oppostion Movement
Introduction
i. Pre-1918 Tributaries of Fascism
1.The War as a Source of National Renewal ,
2.The War as a Proletarian Cause ,
3.The War as the Catharsis of Italian Society ,
4.The War as a Revolutionary Event ,
5.'Trenchocracy' ,
6.The Futurist Vision of the New Italy ,
7.
8.The War as the Midwife of a New Italian People ,
ii Fascism in Opposition 23 March 1918 - 27 October 1922
9.San Sepulcro Fascism ,
10.The Regency of Fiume as the Harbinger of the New Italy ,
11.The Nationalist Blueprint for a New Italy ,
12.The Squadistri as the Revolutionaries of the New Italy ,
13.Fascism as the Victory of the New Italy ,
14.The Incorporation of the Peasantry into the Italian Nation ,
15.Fascism's Myth: The Nation ,
iii. The Coalition Government 30 October 1922 - 3 January 1925
16.A Futurist Portrait of the New Prime Minister of Italy ,
17.The New State Born of Syndicalism and Statism ,
18.Fascism's European Mission ,
19.The End of the Liberal Regime ,
B. Fascism in Power January 1925-April 1945
Introduction
i. The Formative Years of the 'Totalitarian' Regime January 1925-February 1929
20.Fascism as a Total Conception of Life ,
21.Fascist Mysticism ,
22.Fascism as the Creator of the Third Italian Civilization ,
23.The Leader as the Voice of the Reborn Race ,
24.The Strength in Numbers ,
25.The Anti-Modernist Aesthetic of Strapaese ,
26.The Modernist Aesthetic of Novecento ,
27.The University as the Incubator of a Fascist Elite ,
28.The Achievements of the Fascist Revolution ,
ii The Period of Consolidation 1930-1934
29.Towards a Fascist Europe ,
30.The Role of Youth under Fascism ,
31.Fascist Corporativism as the Key to a New International Order ,
32.Mussolini's Century ,
33.Going to the People ,
34.The Birth of a New Civilization ,
iii Imperialist Expansion and Alignment with Nazism 1935-1939
35.The Vital Need for Empire ,
36.
(a) From the Abyssinian Campaign
(b) From the Spanish Campaign
37.The Autarkic Mentality and the New Fascist Order ,
38.Blood Brothers: Fascism and Nazism ,
39.The Introduction of Fascist Racial Policy ,
iv Fascism at War 1940-1943
40.People of Italy! Run to your Arms! ,
41.Safeguarding Europe's Birthright against the Jewish Conspiracy ,
42.The New Europe which will Arise from the Axis Victory ,
v The Italian Socialist Republic 1943-1945
43.Fascism Reborn ,
44.The Greatest Massacre of All Time: Democracy ,
45.What Might Have Been: Axis Europe ,
PART II: FASCISM IN GERMANY
Introduction
A. German Fascism before the Nazi Seizure of Power
Introduction
i Pre-1914 Precursors of German Fascism
46.The Redemptive Mission of German Culture ,
47.The Need to Transcend Liberalism ,
48.The Rebirth of German Genius ,
49.Planting the New Reich ,
50.The Need for the Nation to be Healed ,
ii Non-Nazi German Fascisms
51.The Resurgence of the West ,
52.The Eternal German Reich ,
53.The Organic German Nation ,
54.The Great War: Father of a New Age ,
55.The Germany of the Freikorps ,
56.The Emergence of a New Type of Human Being ,
57.The Prussian Spirit: Salvation of the White Race ,
58.The German Knight as the Key to Europe's Recovery ,
iii Nazism before 1933
59.The Mission of the Nazi Movement ,
60.Barren Trees ,
61.'Christ-Socailism' ,
62.Let there be Light ,
63.Motherhood and Warriorhood as the Key to a National Socialism ,
64.Nordic Thinking and the German Rebirth ,
65.Breeding a New Nobility ,
66.The New Human Synthesis ,
B. German Fascism in Power 1933-1945
Introduction
i The Establishment of the Third Reich 1933-1935
67.German Rebirth ,
68.The Third Reich as Savior of the West ,
69.The Total Revolution of National Socialism ,
70.The New Breed of German ,
71.The New German Woman ,
72.The Legal Basis of the Total State ,
73.The Place of Art in Germany's Political Reawakening ,
ii The Period of Consultation 1936-1939
74.Soldierly Economics ,
75.The Joy of the National Socialist Economy ,
76.The Expansionary Spirit of a Rejuvenated People ,
77.Nazism's World Crusade against the Jews ,
78.The Divine Mission of the SS ,
79.The Role of Youth in Perpetuating the Third Reich ,
80.The Successful Cleansing of German Culture ,
81.National Socialism as the Custodian of European Being ,
82.The Third Reich as the Cure for the European Sickness ,
iii The Third Reich at War 1939-1945
83.The New European Order ,
84.A National Socialist Common Market ,
85.Improving the Stock ,
86.The True Meaning of the War ,
87.The Ultimate Turning-Point: Total War ,
88.Moral Dilemmas ,
89.Heimat ,
90.The Rebirth of National Socialism ,
PART III: ABORTIVE FASCISMS 1922-1945
Introduction
A. European Fascisms
i. Britain
91.Christ, Nietzsche, and Caesar ,
92.Towards a Fascist Europe ,
93.A Corporate Britain ,
94.Britain Awake! ,
95.A Spiritual Typhus ,
96.Hitler Shows the Way ,
ii Ireland
97.The New Corporate Ireland ,
iii Spain
98 Ramiro Ledesma Ramos.The Voice of Spain
99.Total Feeling ,
100.Bread and Justice ,
101.A New Breed of Spaniards ,
iv Portugal
102.The Wind of Change ,
103.Ersatz Fascism ,
v France
104.Empty Portfolios ,
105.Saving France ,
106.The European Revolution and the New State ,
107.The Rebirth of European Man ,
vi Belgium
108.The Revolution of Souls ,
109.Fascism's Century ,
vii Norway
110.The Nordic Revival ,
111.A Greater Norway ,
viii Finland
112.The Battle for the New Finland ,
113.The Revolution of the Finnish Heart ,
ix Estonia
114.A New Estonia ,
x Latvia
115.A Latvian Latvia ,
xi Romania
116.The Romanian Legionary's Mission in Spain ,
117.The Resurrection of the Race ,
xii Hungary
118.Hungarism ,
B. Non-European Fascisms
i. South Africa
119.The Reawakening of the Boerevolk ,
ii Chile
120.Chilean Action and National Regeneration ,
121.The Soul of the Race ,
iii Brazil
122.A Fourth Era of Humanity Dawns ,
123.The Soul of the Nation Awakens ,
iv Japan
124.The Need for a Totalitarian Japan ,
125.Write Your Own Mein Kampf ,
PART IV: THEORIES OF FASCISM
Introduction
A. Reactions to Fascism 1920-1945
Introduction
i Ambivalent or Positive Reactions to the Spread of Fascism
126.Black Sheep ,
127.A Plague of Amateur Mussolinis ,
128.A Sunny Disposition ,
129.The Italian Volksstaat ,
130.The Italian Experiment ,
131.To Each Country its Own Fascism ,
132.The Makers of Europe ,
133.A Sense of Humor ,
134.A Bad Good Thing ,
ii Interpretations of Fascism by Marxists
135.
(a) Opening the Door to Fascism
(b) White Terror
(c) Fruit of the Womb
136.Erroneous Definitions ,
137.The Purging Fires of Fascism ,
138.The Return of the Dark Ages ,
iii Democratic Critiques of Fascism
139.Tribal Loyalties ,
140.Dragon's Teeth ,
141.The Hopeless Task ,
142.Rabbits Ruled by Stoats ,
143.Black Magic ,
144.The Iron Heel ,
iv Four Wartime Analyses of Fascism
145.Forcing Elephants into Foxholes ,
146.The Fear of Freedom ,
147.Market Forces ,
148.Rationalism Debunked ,
B. Post-War Judgements on Fascism
Introduction
i Some Approaches to Fascism
149.Paradigms of Fascism ,
150.The View From Moscow ,
151 Joachim Petzold.The View from East Germany
152.The View of a Western Marxist ,
153.Extremism of the Centre ,
154.Defective Nation-Building ,
155.Redemptive Potential ,
156.Fear and Destructiveness ,
157.Making Sense ,
158.Raising the Dead ,
159.Blood and Death ,
160.Utopian Anti-Modernism ,
161.Fascist Modernity ,
ii Some Individual Theories of the Fascist Minimum
162.Resisting Transcendence ,
163.The Total Charismatic Community ,
164.The Latecomer ,
165.Verbal Revolutionarism ,
166.A Mulish Concept ,
167.A Third Way ,
168.A New Nationalist Authoritarian State ,
160.A New Civilization ,
170.The New Synthesis ,
PART V: POST-WAR FASCISMS
Introduction
i Verdicts on the 'Fascist Era' from Veteran Fascists
171.Fascism: Myth and Reality ,
172.The Third Reich: The Triumph of the Demagogues ,
173.Lenin was Right ,
174.The Ideals of the Fascist Era ,
175.The Lunacy of Fascism and Nazism ,
176.Hubris and Miscalculation ,
ii Discourses of Post-War Fascism
177.The Revival of National Socialism ,
178.A Racist Catechism ,
179.How to Save Europe ,
180.The Miracle of the Telephone Box ,
181.A Monumental Lie ,
182.An Ever-Flowing River ,
183.The Bicycle Thief ,
184.Laying it on the Line ,
185.From Class War to Race War ,
186.Truth and Fiction ,
187.The European Revolution ,
188.The True Europe's Revolt against the Modern World ,
189.Europe a Nation ,
190.Regenerating History ,
191.The Metapolitical Rebirth of Europe ,
192.A Breath of Fresh Air ,
193.German Nihilism ,
194.The Will to Modernity of the Conservative Revolution ,
195.Heroic Realism ,
196.The European Genius and the Rediscovery of the Sacred ,
197.The Political Soldier and the National Revolution ,
198.A Community of Destiny ,
iii Contemporary Expressions of Fascism
199.Songs for Europe ,
200.The Immortal Principle ,
201.The Greening of Nazism ,
202.Spiritual AIDS ,
203.Blood, Soil, and Faith ,
204.The Cleansing Hurricane ,
205.Patriots of the World Unite! ,
206.God's Own ,
207.The Romanian Ethnocratic State ,
208.Living Stones of the New Spain ,
209.The European Home ,
210.Saving the Nation ,
211.For a New Italy ,
212.King Kong Meets his Match ,
EPILOGUE
213.The Deadly Trunk of Fascism ,
Select Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index
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http://www.cw.com.tw/blog/blogTopic.action?id=9&nid=2228
黨官僚、政客互喬利益,集結勢力。
這種少數人綑綁的利益體,卻傷害了大多數人民。
古羅馬時代,執政官巡行時,走在前面的開道人員中,一定有一個官員手持「束棒」(fasces),代表最高權威。「束棒」是一束櫸木棍,它由紅帶子綑綁在一起,中間則是一個斧頭柄。
「束棒」的象徵意義是,老百姓乃是散漫的木棒,它只有和代表權威的斧頭綑綁、團結在一起,才有力量。
一九一九年,「束棒」的意義被義大利的墨索里尼發揚光大,成了二十世紀上半期,對全球影響很大的法西斯。
法西斯既是政治運動,也是經濟運動。法西斯認為,國家的經濟活動乃是政治的黏著劑。因此,不但要發達國家資本,甚至要透過政府的經濟角色,將散漫的社會綑綁起來。
於是,黨官僚及政客透過運作,分配經濟資源和公共契約給自己人的公司。透過利益結合,將大家綑綁在一起,遂被認為是一種正當的方法。這也是法西斯體制下,黨官僚及政客致力於「喬利益」的原因。
這種「國家社會主義」的政治,由於受到經濟利益影響,當然系統性的腐化橫行。而它的經濟受到政治的干擾,當然成本大、效率差。
在二十世紀上半葉,國際競爭還不嚴重,因此它能良好運作。只是到了二十世紀後期,國際競爭激烈,而且民主政治深化。這種喬利益的制度,在經濟上,因成本過大而難以為繼;而在政治上,則普遍被認為是貪腐。
但在以前的法西斯國家,這種喬利益的方法,的確是被當作政治的黏著劑。不但歐洲法西斯國家:義大利、西班牙如此,亞洲及拉丁美洲具有法西斯特性的國家也如此。
前幾年,我讀了當代反貪專家李維(Michael Levi),和尼爾肯(David Nelken)所編的論文集《政治的貪腐及貪腐政治》。他們指出,歐洲法西斯經濟裡,那種黨官僚及政客喬事情、抽佣金的方式,乃是近代政治最壞的傳統。它造成貪污的體制化。
這也是一九九○年代,全球反貪都把「喬事情、分利潤」換成「政治獻金」列為最大重點的原因。
因此,對法西斯經濟的運作模式,世人應加強反省。法西斯主義強調國家整體利益,以不自由、不民主的方式,選擇性地瓜分國家利益,靠著利益共享,把這些人綑綁在一起。
但任何人都知道,這種綑綁可以綁出很大的勢力,但綁不成一個國家。它所造成的貪腐、無效率,反而會傷害到沒有綁在一起的大多數人民。
法西斯的這種喬利益、綁利益的運作方式,乃是歐洲許多有法西斯傳統的國家,如義大利、西班牙、希臘等,每況愈下的主因。
二十世紀上半葉,法西斯的政治及經濟思想曾影響到許多後進國。當時的中華民國,即很多事都學法西斯,在經濟上影響極大。瓜分利益、喬國家的採購契約,即是法西斯時代的殘餘。這也是中華民國轉型最需要揚棄的壞習慣!
---
http://www.cw.com.tw/blog/blogTopic.action?id=9&nid=2228
法西斯式的貪腐經濟
作者:南方朔 2012/08/10
黨官僚、政客互喬利益,集結勢力。
這種少數人綑綁的利益體,卻傷害了大多數人民。
古羅馬時代,執政官巡行時,走在前面的開道人員中,一定有一個官員手持「束棒」(fasces),代表最高權威。「束棒」是一束櫸木棍,它由紅帶子綑綁在一起,中間則是一個斧頭柄。
「束棒」的象徵意義是,老百姓乃是散漫的木棒,它只有和代表權威的斧頭綑綁、團結在一起,才有力量。
一九一九年,「束棒」的意義被義大利的墨索里尼發揚光大,成了二十世紀上半期,對全球影響很大的法西斯。
法西斯既是政治運動,也是經濟運動。法西斯認為,國家的經濟活動乃是政治的黏著劑。因此,不但要發達國家資本,甚至要透過政府的經濟角色,將散漫的社會綑綁起來。
於是,黨官僚及政客透過運作,分配經濟資源和公共契約給自己人的公司。透過利益結合,將大家綑綁在一起,遂被認為是一種正當的方法。這也是法西斯體制下,黨官僚及政客致力於「喬利益」的原因。
這種「國家社會主義」的政治,由於受到經濟利益影響,當然系統性的腐化橫行。而它的經濟受到政治的干擾,當然成本大、效率差。
在二十世紀上半葉,國際競爭還不嚴重,因此它能良好運作。只是到了二十世紀後期,國際競爭激烈,而且民主政治深化。這種喬利益的制度,在經濟上,因成本過大而難以為繼;而在政治上,則普遍被認為是貪腐。
但在以前的法西斯國家,這種喬利益的方法,的確是被當作政治的黏著劑。不但歐洲法西斯國家:義大利、西班牙如此,亞洲及拉丁美洲具有法西斯特性的國家也如此。
前幾年,我讀了當代反貪專家李維(Michael Levi),和尼爾肯(David Nelken)所編的論文集《政治的貪腐及貪腐政治》。他們指出,歐洲法西斯經濟裡,那種黨官僚及政客喬事情、抽佣金的方式,乃是近代政治最壞的傳統。它造成貪污的體制化。
這也是一九九○年代,全球反貪都把「喬事情、分利潤」換成「政治獻金」列為最大重點的原因。
因此,對法西斯經濟的運作模式,世人應加強反省。法西斯主義強調國家整體利益,以不自由、不民主的方式,選擇性地瓜分國家利益,靠著利益共享,把這些人綑綁在一起。
但任何人都知道,這種綑綁可以綁出很大的勢力,但綁不成一個國家。它所造成的貪腐、無效率,反而會傷害到沒有綁在一起的大多數人民。
法西斯的這種喬利益、綁利益的運作方式,乃是歐洲許多有法西斯傳統的國家,如義大利、西班牙、希臘等,每況愈下的主因。
二十世紀上半葉,法西斯的政治及經濟思想曾影響到許多後進國。當時的中華民國,即很多事都學法西斯,在經濟上影響極大。瓜分利益、喬國家的採購契約,即是法西斯時代的殘餘。這也是中華民國轉型最需要揚棄的壞習慣!