Italian Modernities: What If We Were Never Modern?
Forlenza, Rosario; Thomassen, Bjørn
2016-10-01 00:00:00
[The study of Italian political history is a privileged prism for the unfolding of alternative and sometimes competing modernities. The figurations of political thought and culture that emerged in twentieth-century Italy can be seen as a microcosm of Europe’s twentieth-century age of ideologies. To think about Italy less as a latecomer to modernity and more in terms of its composite Mediterranean and European specificities means to reopen its historical archive and reassess its history.]
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[The study of Italian political history is a privileged prism for the unfolding of alternative and sometimes competing modernities. The figurations of political thought and culture that emerged in twentieth-century Italy can be seen as a microcosm of Europe’s twentieth-century age of ideologies. To think about Italy less as a latecomer to modernity and more in terms of its composite Mediterranean and European specificities means to reopen its historical archive and reassess its history.]
Published: Oct 1, 2016
Keywords: Organize Crime; Global Capitalism; European Specificity; Political Thinker; Unfulfilled Promise
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