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Populismus und Faschismus in Europa: Wahlverwandtschaft oder Mesalliance?
[journal article]
Abstract "The relationship between fascism und populism has scarcely been scrutinized on a social and ideological level. Rather, their common features are seen on a socio-psychological level (anti-Semitism, xenophobia, and a liking for conspiracy theories). In this essay it is argued that, firstly, fascism h... view more
"The relationship between fascism und populism has scarcely been scrutinized on a social and ideological level. Rather, their common features are seen on a socio-psychological level (anti-Semitism, xenophobia, and a liking for conspiracy theories). In this essay it is argued that, firstly, fascism had no fully fledged ideology of its own, but stemmed from different, sometimes even contradictory sources. This entailed continuous compromising between different currents within the fascist power bloc, among them also populist aspirations. Secondly, populism as a thin ideology, encompassing anti-elitism, anti-modernism, and nativism, is not considered as a characteristic property of fascism itself, but as an undercurrent. The more fascism established itself as a regime, the more populists became marginalized, and sometimes even an oppositional force claiming a second wave and a return to the origins. They advocated a genuine 'people's state' or a real 'Volksgemeinschaft', whereas Mussolini's appeals to the people proved to be merely temporary instrumental moves in order to gain the approval of the masses. Furthermore, it is argued that the Italian populist 'Strapaese' can be compared with the German 'Völkische'. They both had an ambivalent attitude towards modernization and advocated not a technocratic, but an 'organic' path to modernization based on a holistic world-view. Last but not least, populists expected fascism to foster an elite circulation, bringing the 'sons of the people' into leading positions in the fascist regime. The relationship between the fascist regimes and populists finally turned out as a mutual disillusion." (author's abstract)... view less
Keywords
fascism; populism; interdependence; historical development; Europe; ambivalence; modernity; elite; Protestantism; research; France; social construction; reality; Weimar Republic (Germany, 1918-33); religion; ideology; protest movement; comparative research; Italy; theory-practice; collective identity; clientelism
Classification
General History
Method
historical; theory application
Document language
German
Publication Year
2012
Page/Pages
p. 213-234
Journal
Totalitarismus und Demokratie, 9 (2012) 2
Issue topic
Populismus und Faschismus / Populism and fascism
ISSN
1612-9008
Status
Published Version; reviewed
Licence
Deposit Licence - No Redistribution, No Modifications