This book investigates how fascism as an ideology and political praxis reconfigured the ideological, political, and moral landscape of interwar Europe, generating an atmosphere of extreme license that facilitated the leap into eliminationist violence. It demonstrates how fascist ideology linked the prospect of violent cleansing to utopias of national/racial regeneration, thus encouraging and legitimizing targeted hatred against particular others. It also shows how the diffusion and internationalization of fascism in the 1930s produced a sense of a revolutionary new beginning and created a transnational fascist new order in which Nazi Germany came to occupy a potent position of authority. The book analyzes how the eliminationist initiative and precedent of Nazi Germany became a second license that empowered fascist regimes across Europe to embark on their own eliminationist projects with diminished accountability. Finally, it examines how this license enhanced by the actions of fascists and the collapse of order caused by World War Two released individuals and communities from the burden of legal and moral accountability, turning them into accomplishes in the most wide, brutal, and devastating genocidal campaign that the continent had ever experienced.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Main Concepts: Fascism, Nation-statism, Eliminationism and Fascist Agency
Part A The Overlapping Circles of Nationalism and Race: Constructing Other-ness and Rehearsing Elimination
Chapter 1 - Identity and Other-Ness: From Nationalism to the Elimination of Others
Chapter 2 Race, Nation and the Internal Enemy
Part B Rebirth and Cleansing: Fascist Ideology and the Licence to Hate
Chapter 3 - The Fascist Synthesis: Rebirth, Cleansing and the Ideal Nation-State &ll,