I. What is Fascism?
II. Avoiding Fascism
III. Fascist FAQ
A. Scope
B. Didn't Mussolini say Fascism was "rule by corporations"?
C. Can fascism be defined as radical anti-communism?
D. Why is your style irregular in its capitalization of "fascism"?
B. Didn't Mussolini say Fascism was "rule by corporations"?
C. Can fascism be defined as radical anti-communism?
D. Why is your style irregular in its capitalization of "fascism"?
The best definitions of fascism come
from the recent writings of scholars who
have devoted years to the study of fascist movements and have identified the key
attributes that distinguish fascism from simple authoritarianism.
Michael Mann is an historical
sociologist and Professor of Sociology at UCLA. In his book Fascists
(Cambridge University Press, 2004) he provides the following
definition:
· Transcendence: Belief that the state can
transcend social conflict and blend all social classes into a harmonious whole.
Belief in the power of political ideology to transcend human nature and produce
a better world.
· Cleansing (ethnic): Favoring one or more ethnic
or racial groups over others, either by granting special privileges or imposing
disabilities; deportation of ethnic minorities, or worse.
· Cleansing (political): Silencing the political
opposition so that the transcendent aims of fascism can be realized. Restricting
the freedom of speech, outlawing opposition parties, imprisoning political
opponents (or worse) and indoctrinating youth in fascist principles.
· Statism: Promoting a high degree of state
intervention in personal, social, or economic matters. Belief that the state can
accomplish anything.
· Nationalism: Belief in the inherent unity of a
population with distinct linguistic, physical, or cultural characteristics and
its identification with a nation-state. Belief that the nation possesses special
attributes that make it superior to other nations in some or all ways.
· Paramilitarism: "Grass roots", populist
squadrism aimed at coercing opponents and obtaining popular approbation by
acting as a supplementary police force.
Robert Paxton is an American
historian and emeritus professor of history at Columbia University . In his book The
Anatomy of Fascism (Alfred A. Knopf,
2004) he develops the following definition:
Bosworth is professor of history at
the University of Western Australia and has been a Visiting Fellow at
Columbia , Cambridge , Oxford , and
Trento
Universities .
In his book Mussolini’s
Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915-1945 (Penguin Press, 2006) he reviews the
definitions of Mann and Paxton, with some approbation and some criticism.
Regarding Paxton he points out, for example, that the Italian Fascist
regime, once in power, left the court system largely intact, provided a good
measure of due process, never established anything close to a gulag, and
accommodated the church – hardly things that indicate it was “without ethical or
legal restraints”. Regarding Mann, he disputes the
notion that Italian Fascism “killed democracy” by observing (rightly) that
pre-Fascist Italy was not a democracy anyway, and
questions the importance of ideological “transcendence”. Bosworth
avoids a succinct definition of Fascism for reasons he himself summarizes as
follows:
All three authors agree that
statism, nationalism , unity, authoritarianism, and vigor are essential elements
of fascism.
All three authors spend some time
discussing things commonly thought to characterize fascism but which do
not. They note that such things as parades and street
violence were common features of mass movements at the time, and
not distinctively fascist. They also note that the role of
anti-Semitism in the rise of fascist movements was minor.
In the Italian case, it played no role at all in the early days, and
indeed many Jews were party members. And then of course there was
Mussolini's Jewish mistress Margherita Sarfatti. In Germany ,
anti-Semitism was intentionally downplayed by the Nazis during their ascendant
phase because many voters found it offensive.
Bosworth is not wholly satisfied
with the definitions offered by Mann and Paxton, as previously noted.
Mann differs from Paxton and Bosworth on various points, two notable ones
being:
i. Charismatic
leadership. Mann tends to assign this attribute lesser weight
because his analysis includes fascist movements (in Romania , Hungary , Austria , Spain , and Greece ) where
charismatic leadership was not an essential element.
ii. Violence.
Unlike Bosworth and Paxton, Mann is a sociologist and takes a more
thoughtful approach in analyzing the use of violence in fascist
movements. For Mann, violence is something that states do to
maintain order; they do it with military and police forces, prisons, and the
gallows. It is the use of paramilitary violence, not violence per
se, that Mann finds to be an essential attribute of ascendant fascism.
Once fascists have control of the state, they tend to enforce the state’s
monopoly on violence and suppress the irregular violence of the squadristi
(Black Shirts, Brown Shirts, etc.). Mann has the better of the
argument here.
After reviewing the works of these
and many other authors, together with sundry primary historical and sociological
sources, I think the following definition best captures the etiology and
ontology of fascism.
ii. Immediate
and direct resolution of problems. This is often confounded
with violence. Practically however it had more to do with cutting
through red tape and taking shortcuts. Sometimes this involved
squadrist violence, and sometimes it did not. It is important to
realize that excessive bureaucratization and ineffective justice systems played
a role in the rise of fascism. An example will be helpful.
(b) Shopkeeper
sells wine to children. He has bribed the police and nothing
happens.
(c) Shopkeeper
sells wine to children. He has bribed the judge and his case is
dismissed.
(d) Shopkeeper
sells wine to children. The police arrest him, and he is promptly
fined and imprisoned.
(e) Shopkeeper
sells wine to children. He is cited and the case drags on for a
year, ultimately disposed of with a plea to a lesser charge or a deferred
prosecution agreement.
A person
interested in doing substantial justice with proper safeguards for individual
rights would choose scenario (d) as the most desirable.
But if scenario (d) is not working, is scenario (a) worse than the
remaining choices? At least with scenario (a) substantial justice
is done. And these were the kinds of choices that fascists had to
make. Direct action did achieve immediate results and contributed
greatly to the popularity of fascism in its ascendant stages.
iii. Intolerance
for dissent. It would be trivial to observe that since the
fascist model required individuals to serve the nation-state as the embodiment
of the popular will, and subordinate their interests to it, dissent would be
unthinkable for any true believer. A stronger reason for
suppressing dissent can be found in the emotional characteristics of
fascism. Accepting that ideas firmly held become reality, a
dissenter imperiled the collective spell, and dissent was seen as a species of
malefic witchcraft.
Brief reference must be made to
definitions of fascism offered in popular works intended for the mass
market. These “definitions” are typically lists of attributes
deemed to be essential characteristics of fascism. Invariably
these lists contain attributes that are often found in non-fascist states, and
the authors fail to distinguish fascism from simple authoritarianism, if indeed
they even understand that distinction. Examples of
authors offering these trivial analyses include Naomi Wolf, Lawrence Britt, Umberto
Eco, and others. (I very much like Umberto Eco’s fiction but he is
definitely not an analytical thinker.)
Ensure that the people are
secure in possession of their lives, liberty, and property.
Locke had this one right. And as Jefferson observed, a government that does not ensure
these things should be overthrown. Until a government can
ensure a high degree of public order it has no business doing anything
else. Pursuit of other objectives, however worthy,
while public order is lacking will bring the government into
contempt and require the people to seek security from vigilante and squadrist
organizations. At that point the government is seen as a useless
hindrance and fascism is imminent.
Gandhi said that in his law
practice he “strained every nerve to bring about a compromise,” and that “The
true function of a lawyer was to unite parties riven asunder.” (Mohandas Gandhi,
The
Story of My Experiments with Truth, ch. 14). Gandhi saw
compromise as a spiritual necessity.
Amateur commentators on
fascism (Wolf, Britt, Eco et al.) fail to see that fascists did most of their
work using the state’s monopoly on “legitimate” violence with nearly universal
popular approbation. This included passing laws that controlled
the most trivial aspects of human behavior, backed up by the traditional
apparatus of police, courts, and prisons. In many cases
considerable procedural due process existed, most notably in Italy , where the
judicial machinery was largely untouched. But of
course procedural due process used to enforce an unjust law does not yield
justice.
This section
addresses various questions received in emails, usually from readers who have
read amateur definitions of fascism.
Yes, but he did not mean
BUSINESS corporations, and he meant rule by
means of corporations.
One means to achieving the
fascist goal of transcendent unity was corporatism. In Italian Fascism, this
involved a vertical reorganization of society into syndicates or "corporations"
that grouped people by their field of endeavor, rejecting horizontal
distinctions of management and labor. The initial organization, following the
Rocco Law of 1926, "established syndicates of industry, agriculture, commerce,
maritime and air transport, land and inland waterway transit and banking, with
intellectuals and artisans being grouped in a seventh syndicate of their own."
(Bosworth, op.cit., 226)
Thus, when Mussolini referred
to a "corporate state", he meant organizing management and labor into syndicates
under the thumb of the Duce. This was rule by
means of corporations -- an expedient but certainly not a defining
characteristic of fascism.
No more need be said of this.
Wikipedia has a decent concise article on Corporatism that will
clarify proper usage of the term.
This confusion is not new. I
remember when I was an undergraduate many years ago a student used the term
"corporate state" in class, referring to some vague idea of a state in which
business corporations run the show, and the professor, being an Oxford man,
thought he was talking about Fascist corporatism. The confusion was soon
resolved. But we are likely to see more of this now that the American
education system has given up teaching history, philosophy, mathematics and so
forth in favor of diversity studies and post-modernist literary
criticism.
I guess, if you want to
define Bolshevism as "radical anti-capitalism". Seem like pretty impoverished
definitions to me.
When used in reference to Italian Fascism the
word is a proper noun. Otherwise it is not.
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