Mussolini and the Making of Modern Italy: Ideology, Institutions, and Legacy
MTA
A concise yet comprehensive study of fascism's rise, governance, and long-term effects on Italian politics and society.
2nd Edition
*Mussolini and the Making of Modern Italy* provides a comprehensive analysis of the rise, governance, and enduring impact of the fascist regime. The book begins by examining the post-WWI social and economic crises that allowed Mussolini to seize power through a combination of paramilitary violence and tactical legal maneuvers. It details the dismantling of the liberal state via the Acerbo Law and the "most fascist laws," which established a totalitarian party-state. The narrative explores the regime’s core ideologies—nationalism, syndicalism, and anti-liberalism—and how these were institutionalized through the Corporate State, mass propaganda, and totalizing youth and labor organizations like the OND and GIL.
The book further evaluates the regime’s major domestic policies, including the "Battle for Grain," land reclamation projects, and the creation of state-owned entities like IRI, which fundamentally reshaped the Italian economy and urban landscape. It addresses the regime’s increasingly radical turn in the late 1930s, marked by the brutal pacification of Libya, the conquest of Ethiopia, and the introduction of the 1938 racial laws. This period of empire-building and ideological synchronization with Nazi Germany led Italy into a disastrous involvement in World War II, which ultimately resulted in military collapse, the puppet state of the Italian Social Republic (RSI), and a traumatic civil war between fascists and the Resistance.
The final section of the study focuses on the transition from the fall of Mussolini to the birth of the Italian Republic in 1946. It scrutinizes the complex process of transitional justice, including the purges of fascist officials and the controversial Togliatti Amnesty that prioritized social stability over complete retribution. The book highlights how the new democratic constitution was explicitly designed as a repudiation of fascism, yet simultaneously traces the significant continuities in the state’s bureaucracy, judiciary, and police forces. By preserving many fascist-era institutions and administrative routines, the new Republic inherited a "deep state" that influenced Italian governance throughout the postwar era.
Ultimately, the book assesses the persistent legacy of fascism in contemporary Italian society, from the aesthetic remains of rationalist architecture to the political evolution of the far right. It tracks the trajectory of neo-fascism from the founding of the MSI to the rise of modern nationalist parties, illustrating how the memory of the regime remains a contested battlefield. By combining archival research with policy analysis, the work concludes that while the fascist regime was formally defeated, its institutional, economic, and cultural imprints remain woven into the fabric of modern Italy, continuing to shape national identity and political discourse.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of modern European history, particularly those focusing on Italian history, fascism, and authoritarian regimes. It will also benefit political science students studying democratic breakdown and reconstruction, as well as general readers interested in understanding how historical ideologies and institutions shape contemporary society and politics in Italy and beyond.
January 20, 2026
69,092 words
4 hours 50 minutes
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