1st Edition

The Totalitarian Experiment in Twentieth Century Europe Understanding the Poverty of Great Politics

By David Roberts Copyright 2006
    591 Pages
    by Routledge

    592 Pages
    by Routledge

    By developing a long-term supranational perspective, this ambitious, multi-faceted work provides a new understanding of ‘totalitarianism’, the troubling common element linking Soviet communism, Italian fascism and German Nazism. The book’s original analysis of antecedent ideas on the subject sheds light on the common origins and practices of the regimes.

    Through this fresh appreciation of their initial frame of mind, Roberts demonstrates how the three political experiments yielded unprecedented collective mobilization but also a characteristic combination of radicalization, myth-making, and failure.

    Providing deep historical analysis, the book proves that 'totalitarianism' best characterizes the common features in the originating aspirations, the mode of action and even the outcomes of Soviet communism, Italian fascism and German Nazism.

    By enhancing our knowledge of what ‘totalitarianism’ was and where it came from, Roberts affords important lessons about the ongoing challenges, possibilities, and dangers of the modern political experiment.

    1. Layers, Proportions, and the Question of Historical Specificity 2.Seams, Creases, and the Emergence of New Conditions of Possibility in the Nineteenth Century 3.Some Diagnoses and Prescriptions 4. Innovative Departures in the Wake of the Great War 5. The Totalitarian Dynamics of Leninism-Stalinism 6.Conflicted Totalitarianism in Fascist Italy 7. Conflicted Totalitarianism in Fascist Italy 7. The Hollow Triumph of the Will in Nazi Germany 8. The Epochal Commonality of the Three Regimes9. Ending and Continuing after the Totalitarian Moment

    Biography

    David D. Roberts is Albert Berry Saye Professor of History at the University of Georgia. Among his numerous publications are The Syndicalist Tradition and Italian Fascism (1979), Benedetto Croce and the Uses of Historicism (1987) and Nothing But History: Reconstruction and Extremity after Metaphysics (1995).