Mussolini's ItalyList of illustrations
List of abbreviations
Note on further reading
Maps
Preface
Introduction
1. One Italy or another before 1914
2. Liberal and dynastic war
3. Popular and national war
4. 1919
5. Becoming a Fascist
6. Learning to rule in the provinces
7. Learning to rule from Rome
8. Building a totalitarian dictatorship
9. Forging Fascist society
10. Placing Italy in Europe
11. Going to the people
12. Dictating full-time
13. Becoming imperialists
14. Embracing Nazi Germany
15. Lurching into war
16. The wages of Fascist war
17. Losing all the wars
18. The Fascist heritage
Conclusion
Notes
Index
R. J. B. Bosworth is an Australian historian and author and a recognized expert on Fascist Italy. He taught history at the University of Sydney and the University of Western Australia, and was a senior research fellow at Jesus College, Oxford. A fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, Bosworth is the author of Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915–1945 and The Oxford Handbook of Fascism.
Shrewd, lucid, exhaustively documented and totally unsentimental.
(David Schoenbaum, The New York Times)
With this insightful, comprehensive study, Bosworth secures his
place as one of the two leading historians in the English-speaking
world . . . of twentieth-century Italy. (Publishers Weekly, starred
and boxed review)
A powerful work of scholarship, beautifully written, which should
be read by anyone interested in twentieth-century Europe. (The
Economist)
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