2004
Special Issue: Architectural Projections of a ‘New Order’ in Interwar Dictatorships – Part 2 “edited by [Roger Griffin and Rita Almeida de Carvalho]”
  • ISSN: 2211-6249
  • E-ISSN: 2211-6257

Abstract

This article seeks to intervene in the debate over the legacy of the British Empire, using the British Union of Fascists () as a case-study. It will argue that, during the interwar period, the drew heavily on earlier constructions of racialized imperial masculinity in building their ‘new fascist man’. The stand out in the period following the First World War, where hegemonic constructions of British masculinity were altogether more domesticated. At the same time, colonial policymakers were increasingly relying on concessions, rather than force, to outmanoeuvre nationalists out in the Empire. For the , this all smacked of effeminacy and they responded with a ‘new man’ based on the masculine values of the idealized imperial frontier. By transplanting these values from colony to metropole, they hoped to achieve their fascist rebirth of Britain and its Empire. This article charts the ’s construction of this imperial ‘new fascist man’ out the legacy of earlier imperialists, the canon of stories of imperial heroism, and the gendered hierarchies of colonial racism.

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/content/journals/10.1163/22116257-00702006
2018-10-17
2025-12-07
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): Britain; Chesterton; empire; fascism; imperialism; masculinity; Mosley; whiteness
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