The efforts of fascism to form a 'culture of consent,' or shape depoliticized activities, in Italy between the world wars, make a unique portrait of fascist political tactics. Professor de Grazia focuses on the dopolavoro or fascist leisure-time organization, the largest of the regime's mass institutions. She traces its gradual rise in importance for the consolidation of fascist rule; its spread in the form of thousands of local clubs into every domain of urban and rural life; and its overwhelming impact on the distribution, consumption, and character of all kinds of recreational pursuits - from sports and adult education to movies, traveling theaters, radio, and tourism. The author shows how fascism was able, between 1926 and 1939, to build a new definition of the public sphere. Recasting the public sphere entailed dispensing with traditional class and politically defined modes of organizing those social roles and desires existing outside the workplace.
| Limba | Engleza |
| Cuprins | Preface; 1. The organization of consent; 2. The politics of after-work; 3. Taylorizing worker leisure; 4. The penetration of the countryside; 5. Privileging the clerks; 6. The nationalization of the public; 7. The formation of fascist low culture; 8. The limits of consent; Notes; Abbreviations; Bibliography; Index. |
| Data Publicarii | 25 July 02 |
| Format | Paperback |
| Paginare | 324 |
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