1st Edition
Perpetrators, Accomplices and Victims in Twentieth-Century Politics Reckoning with the Past
-Introduction: Matthew Feldman (University of Northampton) and Marius Turda (Oxford Brookes University), Approaching "clerical fascism’
-Griffin, Roger (Oxford Brookes University), ‘The Holy Storm’: "clerical fascism" through the lens of modernism
-Steigmann Gall, Richard (Kent State University), The Nazis’ ‘Positive Christianity’: A case of "clerical fascism"?
-Bodo, Bela (Grand Valley University), The Catholic Church and the White Terror in Hungary, 1919-1922
-Cronin, Mike (Boston College), Catholicising fascism, fascistising Catholicism? The Blueshirts and the Jesuits in 1930s Ireland
-Berggren, Lena (University of Umea), Completing the Lutheran revolution: "clerical fascism" and ultra-nationalism in interwar Sweden
-De Wever, Bruno (Ghent University), Catholicism and fascism in Belgium
-Linehan, Thomas (Brunel University), ‘On the Side of Christ’: clerics and fascists in interwar Britain
-Dagninio, Jorge (University of Oxford), Catholic modernities in Fascist Italy: The case of the FUCI
-Falina, Maria (Central European University), Between "clerical fascism" and political orthodoxy: the case of interwar Serbia
-Pinto, Antonio Costa (University of Lisbon), Political Catholicism, Crisis of Democracy, and Salazar’s New State in Portugal
-Biondich, Mark (Carleton University), The Ustasha and "clerical fascism" in the wartime Independent State of Croatia
-Sandulescu, Valentin (Central European University), Scaralised Politics in Action: The February 1937 Burial of the Romanian Legionary Leaders Ion Mota and Vasile Marin
-Kallis, Aristotle (University of Lancaster) The Metaxas regime and "clerical fascism" in interwar Greece
-Pyrah, Robert (University of Oxford) Enacting Encyclicals: Austrian cultural politics in the context of "clerical fascism"
-Shekhovstov, Anton (TO FOLLOW), "Clerical fascism" in interwar Ukraine: Its nature and place in the European context
-Kocoureck, Katya (TO FOLLOW), ‘The father of the Slovak nation and his devout followers’: Andrei Hlinka, Jozef Tiso and Karol Sidor in the struggle for SL’s power, 1935-8
-Krzywies, Grezegorz (TO FOLLOW), Catholic authoritarians or fascists: The Case of National Democracy in Poland
-Pollard, John (Cambridge University), Context, Overview and Conclusion
Biography
Anatoly M. Khazanov is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Stanley G. Payne is Hilldale-Jaume Vicens Vives Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.






