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fascist

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Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 188–206.
Published: 01 June 2023
... for the mainstream return of fascist politics of white supremacy. In this context of alternative histories taken as fact, of conspiracy rhetoric seemingly impervious to reason, this article asks how we can respond in intellectually robust ways that will help us to ground an inclusive culture and build a better...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2003) 55 (2): 177–185.
Published: 01 March 2003
..., 2001. 259 p. Over the last two decades and especially since the de Man and Heidegger Affairs of the late 1980s, fascism’s and nazism’s troubling relationship to European cultural modernity has been the focus of numerous monographs, articles, and edited volumes. These studies of “fascist...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2003) 55 (2): 185–190.
Published: 01 March 2003
... relationship to European cultural modernity has been the focus of numerous monographs, articles, and edited volumes. These studies of “fascist modernity” focus primarily on Italy, Germany, and France and tend to fall into one of several categories. One such category is comprised of works like Robert...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2020) 72 (4): 460–462.
Published: 01 December 2020
.... Calderwood explains how Blas Infante used this Andalusismo (Andalusi-ism) for the cause of Andalusian regionalism. Gil Benumeya later transformed this into a fascist ideal through which Morocco is the bearer of the Andalusi legacy whose rightful guardians are the Spanish. In chapter 4, “Franco’s Hajj...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2022) 74 (1): 99–118.
Published: 01 March 2022
... period, that seem to have had a strong influence on the way he approaches minority language issues. The most prominent of these is bilingualism. The degree to which Catalan continued to exist alongside Spanish, despite serious repression on the part of Spain’s Fascist state (which was marked...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2010) 62 (3): 283–301.
Published: 01 June 2010
... bis 1993) . Berlin: Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, 2000 . Hell, Julia. Post-Fascist Fantasies: Psychoanalysis, History, and the Literature of East Germany . Durham: Duke UP, 1997 . Herlinghaus, Hermann. Alejo Carpentier: Persönliche Geschichte eines literarischen Moderneprojekts . München...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2022) 74 (4): 448–470.
Published: 01 December 2022
..., the legal Government and the People of Republican Spain? Are you for, or against, Franco and Fascism?” The Left Review in London published the questionnaire, a collaboration between Cunard and an international group of anti-fascist writers including Neruda, Louis Aragon, Auden, José Bergamín, Ramón Sender...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2016) 68 (3): 351–353.
Published: 01 September 2016
.... She shows how Marinetti’s iconoclastic tirade against “passéist Venice,” a publicity stunt intended to shock the bourgeois audience of the International Exposition of Art, in fact captured the Zeitgeist of the new Fascist regime, which promoted the expansion of the industrial port at Marghera...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2002) 54 (4): 357–359.
Published: 01 September 2002
... and dispersal, legibility and illegibility, and the “tension of its undecidability” makes it “unusable” for “fascist purposes, or any politics that relies on stable meanings and trans- parent essences” (pp. 172-73). To “retreat” in this way from fascism’s oppressive imposi- tion of closure is therefore...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2002) 54 (4): 359–362.
Published: 01 September 2002
... and dispersal, legibility and illegibility, and the “tension of its undecidability” makes it “unusable” for “fascist purposes, or any politics that relies on stable meanings and trans- parent essences” (pp. 172-73). To “retreat” in this way from fascism’s oppressive imposi- tion of closure is therefore...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2002) 54 (4): 363–366.
Published: 01 September 2002
... and dispersal, legibility and illegibility, and the “tension of its undecidability” makes it “unusable” for “fascist purposes, or any politics that relies on stable meanings and trans- parent essences” (pp. 172-73). To “retreat” in this way from fascism’s oppressive imposi- tion of closure is therefore...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2021) 73 (1): 61–83.
Published: 01 March 2021
... during the fascist era, up to 1941, when Britain took control of all the Italian colonies in the Horn of Africa. After the fall of fascism, the United Nation entrusted the newly elected Italian government with a mandate of trusteeship (Amministrazione Fiduciaria Italiana della Somalia) over the former...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2000) 52 (3): 246–254.
Published: 01 June 2000
... University Press, 1998 . Chow, Rey. “The Fascist Longings in our Midst.” Ariel 26 ( 1995 ): 23 -50. ____. Writing Diaspora: Tactics of Intervention in Contemporary Cultural Studies . Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993 . Clark, John. “On Two Books by Edward W. Said.” Jurnal Bicara...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2015) 67 (2): 232–234.
Published: 01 June 2015
... gained equal renown in poetic circles. Rogers explores both of these figures’ translated impact. In Lorca’s case, his assassination in 1936 turned him into a symbol of fascist brutality and increased the sympa- thy of many intellectuals toward the Republic, whose rocky politics had led some of a con...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2017) 69 (2): 201–221.
Published: 01 June 2017
... the dissemination of communism in fascist Japan. Under the notorious Chianijihō (Peace Preservation Act) of 1925, Japanese nationals and for- eign visitors were all subjected to interrogation or trial if they had the potential to impart anticolonial and communist doctrines to the public (Byas 86–91). As Hughes...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2020) 72 (3): 316–339.
Published: 01 September 2020
... de poids que le mont Taichan, d’autres en ont moins qu’une plume . La mort du camarade Omari a plus de poids que le mont Taichan parce qu’il a été poursuivi et abattu par des forces réactionnaires et fascistes. Nous ne pouvons pas laisser cela sans suite” ( Bofane, Congo Inc.: Le testament 105...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2010) 62 (4): 361–375.
Published: 01 September 2010
... scholarship.6 The Pound most commonly in circulation is a fascist and an anti-Semite, Exhibit A in the intertwined rejections of “the ideology of the aesthetic” and the concept of totality, both of which are typically seen to be irredeemably totalitarian. Pound, of course, did not help his case...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2018) 70 (1): 101–104.
Published: 01 March 2018
... interested in the ability of free indirect discourse in film to push past the state where speaking for others and thinking for others is fascist and victim- izing, to the place where we are forced to give up what elsewhere she calls “the fictions of shared reference” (Thinking 95). Getting to that place...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2012) 64 (2): 121–149.
Published: 01 June 2012
... of the organically whole work as embodiment of absolute value.8 The anxiety of not being able to act — don’t be a fascist, don’t be a communist, don’t be a capitalist, don’t be a scientist — is symptomatized through reaction for- mation (“it’s good to turn away from the world”) as the disappearance of the read...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2020) 72 (1): 68–82.
Published: 01 March 2020
.... The search, it transpires, is an extended metaphor for hope in a world of poverty, unemployment, and political incompetence, the vestiges of the collapse of the Fascist regime and the war. Albert Camus started writing the novel La Peste ( The Plague ) during the war and published it in French in 1947...