2004
Special Issue: Fascist and National Socialist Antiquities and Materialities from the Interwar Era to the Present Day Helen Roche, Flaminia Bartolini and Timothy J. Schmalz
  • ISSN: 2211-6249
  • E-ISSN: 2211-6257

Abstract

Abstract

Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany, along with other twentieth-century authoritarian regimes, have often attempted to create consensus through propagandistic reinterpretations of the classical past. The Fascist appropriation of and Nazi philhellenism were not only conditioned by prior cultural receptions of antiquity, but were also a key political tool in motivating and mobilising citizens to fulfil the aims of the fascist state. Once Fascism and Nazism had fallen, the material legacies of both regimes then became the object of destruction, reinterpretation and memory work. Thus, the archaeological and architectural heritage of these regimes, now tainted by their ideology, has not only suffered the consequences of in the aftermath of regime change, but continues even today to inflame contemporary public debate. This special issue represents the product of an interdisciplinary workshop exploring these themes, which was held at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, on 8 June 2018.

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2019-12-17
2025-12-06
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): Fascism; Germany; Italy; National Socialism; philhellenism; romanità
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