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Topic: Enrico Corradini


In the News (Wed 15 Feb 12)

  
  The Mystery of Fascism by David Ramsay Steele
There were also non-leftist currents which fed into Fascism; the most prominent was the nationalism of Enrico Corradini.
Though it was considered rightwing at the time, Corradini called himself a socialist, and similar movements in the Third World would later be warmly supported by the left.
Corradini's nationalists, absorbed into the Fascist Party in 1923, wore blue shirts.
www.la-articles.org.uk /fascism.htm   (8581 words)

  
  Sternhell.html   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The collapse of the Ethiopian campaign in 1896 was seen by Enrico Corradini, the spiritual and political leader of the Italian nationalists, as the collapse of the Italian democratic movement and its supporters on the extreme left.
Enrico Corradini began to elaborate on topics that foreshadowed corporatism, complemented by an unambiguous preference for protectionism and other measures designed to appeal to the nation as a whole, such as the expansion of Italian industry and commerce abroad, and a colonial solution to the problems of population and emigration.
Corradini expressed a fulsome admiration for the results achieved by the proletariat of Europe, and the way in which the doctrine of class struggle had been put into practical operation to the benefit of the workers.
www.coloradocollege.edu /Dept/PS/Finley/PS425/reading/Sternhell.html   (15090 words)

  
 Enrico Corradini - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Enrico Corradini (1865, near Montelupo Fiorentino—1931, Rome) was an Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, and nationalist political figure.
After the war, ANI was led by Corradini into e merger with the Partito Nazionale Fascista (PNF).
Nonetheless, Corradini made sure to detach himself from the more controversial actions of the Blackshirts, while being nominated by Benito Mussolini to the Italian Senate, and joining his government in 1928.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Enrico_Corradini   (356 words)

  
 [No title]
A failure as a novelist and playwright, Corradini made his name as founder and leader of the Nationalist Party in the first decade of the century.
On the pages of "Il Regno," which he founded in 1903, he led the attack on Socialism, as well as on Giolitti's Liberal Ministry ("The pacifistic and unwarlike Little Italy").
His support for the colonization of Libya (1911) drew the fire of Salvemini both in "La Voce" and later in "L'Unita'…." An aggressive interventionist during World War I. In the late 1920's Corradini was a minister under Mussolini, without ever achieving a major influence within the regime.
www.uga.edu /~italian/novecento/3y.htm   (814 words)

  
 Bibliografia
Cipriani, Valeriani, 1989 : Angela Cipriani, Enrico Valeriani (éd.), I disegni di figura nell'Archivio Storico dell'Accademia di San Luca, II.
Cogo, 1996 : Bruno Cogo, Antonio Corradini: scultore veneziano (1688-1752), Este, 1996.
Faccioli, 1968 : Clemente Faccioli, Di uno scultore estense a Roma alla metà del Settecento, Ancora dello scultore estense, in Celebrazioni centenarie in onore dello scultore estense Antonio Corradini (1668-1752), Este, 1968, p. 45-77.
www.lestache.com /biblio.htm   (5443 words)

  
 Britain.tv Wikipedia - Scramble for Africa
Even in lesser powers, voices like Corradini began to claim a "place in the sun"?title=for so-called "proletarian nations", bolstering nationalism and militarism in an early prototype of fascism.
However, by the end of World War I, the colonized empires had become very popular almost everywhere: public opinion had been convinced of the needs of a colonial empire, although many of the metropolitans would never see a piece of it.
^ Enrico Corradini, Report to the First Nationalist Congress: Florence, December 3, 1919.
www.britain.tv /wikipedia.php?title=Scramble_for_Africa   (6575 words)

  
 Janus Head 3.2 / A. James Gregor - The Faces of Janus - Book Review
Fascism, via Syndicalism, transformed the Marxist theory of international revolution by emphasizing an ideology that stressed the conflict between nations.
Syndicalist-Fascists thinkers (Benito Mussolini, Sergio Panunzio, Enrico Corradini) had described the world as divided between developing plutocracies and lesser developed nations that seemed to be destined for exploitation at the hands of those plutocracies.
According to these thinkers any theory emphasizing internationalism was "a product of late capitalism, serving 'free trade' interests of imperialism" and destined to leave "proletarian nations" "the victims of exploitation" (pp.
www.janushead.org /books/rua.cfm   (1036 words)

  
 Giacomo Matteotti Biography | Encyclopedia of World Biography
There was even more unrest in the countryside as movements of agricultural workers formed to improve wages and working conditions, but they faced harsh resistance by landowners.
While Socialist leaders promoted a program of reform in the name of the workers, prior to 1914 Italian nationalist leaders like Enrico Corradini spoke of the need to link all Italians together and to carry out a plan of imperial expansion.
Universal suffrage was established in 1912, creating a large number of new voters whose future political loyalties were uncertain.
www.bookrags.com /biography/giacomo-matteotti   (1533 words)

  
 [No title]
Although Nationalist dogma didn't fully develop until after the First World War, by 1914 Enrico Corradini had developed the general conception of history and beliefs about national solidarity.
Italy was to be transformed into a war machine in all aspects of its life: political, economic, and social.[6] After the war, the Nationalists elaborated their dogma under the leadership of Corradini and Alfredo Rocco.
The current liberal elite must be replaced by a elite consisting of the old bureaucracy and the vital, economically productive bourgeoisie.
www.textfiles.com /politics/SPUNK/sp000849.txt   (7076 words)

  
 The Nationalism Project: Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism
“Enrico Corradini and the Italian Version of Proletarian Nationalism.”; Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism XII, no.1 (1985): 47-63.
Cunsolo, Ronald S. “Enrico Corradini and the Japanese Prototype of Proletarian Nationalism.”; Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism XII, no.2 (1985): 207-214.
Cunsolo, Ronald S. “Enrico Corradini at Marostica (1914): A Nationalist-Catholic Candidacy that Failed.” Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism XXII, no.1-2 (1995): 75-82.
www.nationalismproject.org /journals/CanRevStudNat.html   (8944 words)

  
 "C" Famous People
Cavett, (Richard) Dick 1936- television host; born in Gibbon, Nebr. Caviglia, Enrico (1862-1945) Military leader and marshal of Italy, born in Finale Ligure, Liguria...
Cecchetti, Enrico (1850-1928) Dancer, teacher, and choreographer, born in Milan, N Italy.
Cialdini, Enrico (1811-92) Duke of Gaeta, general and diplomat, born in Castelvetro di Modena...
www.jonathanselby.com /Cfam.html   (17660 words)

  
 Break Their Haughty Power Joaofa
From this problematic legacy on the national question, in Bernardo’s view, it was only a logical next step for the Italian nationalist Enrico Corradini, in 1910, to develop the concept of Italy as a “proletarian nation”;.
Bernardo concludes with a discussion of the ways in which fascist ideology, through dissimulation, survived the massive defeat of World War II., particularly because the victory of the liberal democracies enabled them to rewrite the history of capitalism and downplay their own totalitarian impulse.
He presents some interesting material on France (as in the fascists around DeGaulle from 1940 onward) but by far his most interesting treatment is of the Third World, where Corradini’s concept of the “proletarian nation”; is alive and well.
home.earthlink.net /~lrgoldner/joaofa.html   (5002 words)

  
 Stockholm 2002
Influenced by Japan’s defeat of Russia in 1905, the Italian Nationalist Enrico Corradini wrote of the need to create a Bushido type ethic in order to help liberate Italy, which he saw as ‘the proletarian nation par excellence, suffocated in a world dominated by the high-handedness and greed of capitalist and plutocratic nations.’
Although August Babel criticized this cult, his picture in turn came to be carried regularly in processions by workers.
Indeed, theorists such as Corradini saw fascist mythology as necessary propaganda to free the working class of socialist myths.
staff.bath.ac.uk /mlsre/Seriousfascism.htm   (10879 words)

  
 Salandra   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Salandra served as Minister of Agriculture in the would-be dictatorship of General Luigi Pelloux, 1899-1900.
Yet, by 1912, Salandra articulated a National Policy which distanced him somewhat from the traditional right and incorporated aspects of the neo-romantic new right, such as that of Enrico Corradini's Il regno group.
Salandra now looked to utilizing an aggressive foreign policy and war in fusing the Italian people and eliminating internal divisions.
www.lib.byu.edu /~rdh/wwi/bio/s/salandra.html   (399 words)

  
 History
In depth, the Africanist ideology survived within the geographic companies and certain pressure groups.
It received a new impulse at the beginning of the century, with the young dynamism of the nationalist movement of Enrico Corradini, Giuseppe Prezzolini and the review Il Regno.
The first colonial congress, gathered in Asmara (Egypt) at the end of 1905, goes on by the constitution, in March, 1906, of the Italian colonial Institute, subsidized by the government and which soon publishes, in August, 1906, the Revista Coloniale.
www.african-geopolitics.org /show.aspx?ArticleId=3689   (4281 words)

  
 The U.S.A.: Fascism Past and Present, by Clifford A. Kiracofe, Jr.
With respect to Italian nationalism and Fascism, we can see the influence of Michael Ledeen, a specialist on Italian political thought, who is a major neo-conservative thinker in the United States.
neo-conservatives, who control our foreign policy, by the way, appear to incorporate elements of the nationalist thought of Enrico Corradini (1865-1931) together with the Fascist program of Benito Mussolini.
[25] Most striking is the neo-conservative call for the United States to have a foreign policy of "national greatness," which is precisely the formulation of Corradini that inspired two Italian imperial wars against Ethiopia.
www.larouchepub.com /other/2006/3327kiracoff_berlin.html   (5950 words)

  
 CIRCOLO ANARCHICO PONTE DELLA GHISOLFA
Mai.Venerdì 6 MAGGIO ALLE 21 OLTRE AI FILM DELL'OBRAZPROIEZIONE DEL FILM INEDITO
Enrico Livraghi presenta sei film ultrarari della storica cineteca milanese
Fare il possibile per unificare le lotte parziali che più o meno sporadicamente si accendono, unificare le esperienze di per unificare le rivendicazioni; diffidare di scorciatoie istituzionali: la precarietè  si può imporre per legge, ma non è con una legge che la si cancella; ricordare (in fondo lo abbiamo sempre saputo!
www.ecn.org /ponte   (3989 words)

  
 Watching movies ? Out of time to finish that term paper ? need help ?
The book is filled with interviews and various bits of information that most people know nothing about.
Hitler and Corradini: Nationalistic Fervor : A 5 page comparison of how Adolf Hitler ("Mein Kampf") and Enrico Corradini ("Italian Fascisms") addressed the social domestic policies of nationalism.
The writer also addresses why the two writers addressed the issue as they did.
www.buypapers.com /europehist.htm   (12256 words)

  
 A Description of the Early Fascists in Italy
Finally, (January 24 1921), they burned the local Chamber of Labor, the headquarters of the red movement.
" That night, " melodramatically writes Enrico Corradini, the nationalist leader, "I saw the fortress of the enemy, the Chamber of Labor, disappear in flames.
Cheering citizens assisted at the spectacle while policemen, carbineers, guards and soldiers watched the flames devour the building with their arms at rest."
www.shsu.edu /~his_ncp/Fascist.html   (7039 words)

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