1st Edition
From Hitler to Codreanu The Ideology of Fascist Leaders
Introduction: Fascist Leaders, Generic Fascism and the Conceptual Approach
1. The Conceptual Structure of ‘Generic Fascism’: Seven Core Concepts
2. Adolf Hitler and German National Socialism: Racial Struggle as the Basis of a Worldview
3. Oswald Mosley and the British Union of Fascists: The Ideological Synthesis of "Greater Britain"
4. Francisco Rolão Preto and Portuguese National Syndicalism: Corporatism and the Construction of an Alternative Modernity
5. José António Primo de Rivera and the Spanish Falange: The Historical Mission of the Spanish Nation
6. Corneliu Codreanu and the Iron Guard- The Manichean Battle Between Good and Evil
7. Marcel Déat and the French RNP: The European Revolution and the New Party
8. Benito Mussolini and Italian Fascism: The Creation of a New Conceptual Configuration
9. Final Considerations about the Conceptual Configuration of Generic Fascism
Conclusion
Biography
Carlos Manuel Martins holds a PhD from the University of Lisbon, Portugal. His doctorate research revolved around the ideology of historical fascism and fascist leaders. He is now preparing postdoctoral research on the Contemporary Radical Right.
"This is a book of rare breadth and ambition, resting on elaborate methodological foundations and engaging fluently with comparisons across a wide spectrum of national case studies. Yet Martins’s arguments remain both lucid and attentive to differences, never losing sight of conceptual shifts and interlinkages. As an exercise in comparative fascism studies, this book injects fresh relevance to the analysis of fascist charismatic leaders and their ideas. As a reflection on the intellectual components of fascism, it serves as a poignant reminder of why we need to take generic fascist ideology ever more seriously." Aristotle Kallis, Keele University, UK
"This is an excellent and timely book about the ideology of European fascist leaders. Applying the conceptual morphological approach of Michael Freeden to the analysis of fascist ideology, this path-breaking work is an important contribution to the comparative study of authoritarian politics." António Costa Pinto, University of Lisbon, Portugal






