Did it happen here? Perspectives on fascism and America

Book - 2024

"Did It Happen Here? collects, in one place, key texts from the sharpest minds in politics, history, and the academy beginning with classic pieces by Hannah Arendt, Angela Davis, Reinhold Niebuhr, Leon Trotsky, and others. The book's contemporary contributors include Ruth Ben-Ghiat on the trivialization of the term "fascism," Jason Stanley and Sarah Churchwell on the Black radical perspective, and Robert O. Paxton on Trump. These writers argue firmly that fascism is alive and well in America today, but another set of contemporary voices disagree. Samuel Moyn demonstrates the limitations of historical comparison. Rebecca Panovka examines the uses and abuses of Hannah Arendt's work. Anton Jager and Victoria De Grazia ...make the case that the social and communal conditions necessary for fascism do not exist in the United States. Still others, like Priya Satia and Pankaj Mishra, are critical of the narrow framework of this debate and argue for a global perspective." --

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  • Introduction
  • Part I. Classic Texts
  • Pawns for Fascism
  • Bonapartism, Fascism, and War
  • The Future of Secular Religions
  • The Seeds of a Fascist International
  • Political Prisoners, Prisons, and Black Liberation
  • Ur-Fascism
  • Part II. On Fascism Analogies
  • What Is Fascism?
  • Is It Fascism?
  • I've Hesitated to Call Donald Trump a Fascist. Until Now
  • What We Don't Understand About Fascism
  • Why Trump Isn't a Fascist
  • Why Historical Analogy Matters
  • The Trouble with Comparisons
  • William Barr: The Carl Schmitt of Our Time
  • What's in a Word?
  • Part III. Is Fascism as American as Apple Pie?
  • American Fascism: It Has Happened Here
  • U.S. Fascism v. Angelo Herndon
  • One Hundred Years of Fascism
  • Bellum Se Ipsum Alet
  • There Are No Lone Wolves: The White Power Movement at War
  • Part IV. Global Perspectives
  • From Crisis to Catastrophe: Lineages of the New Right
  • Losing the Present to History
  • Fascism and Analogies-British and American, Past and Present
  • Narendra Modi and the New Face of India
  • So, Is Russia Fascist Now? Labels and Policy Implications
  • Part V. Has Fascism Taken on a New Form Today?
  • Are We Approaching a New Wave of Fascism?
  • Fighting Fascism in the Twenty-First Century: The Adorno Algorithm
  • From Bowling Alone to Posting Alone
  • Men in Dark Times: How Hannah Arendt's Fans Misread the Post-Truth Presidency
  • Gender and the Radical Right's Departures from Fascism
  • Trump and the Trapped Country
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Contributors
  • Credits
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A timely collection of informed voices on fascism. Once upon a time, a flamboyant political novice burst onto the scene. Extolling patriotism and so-called traditional values, he denounced liberalism. Though few establishment figures took him seriously, suddenly, he was the nation's leader, and scholars still debate how it happened. That was Benito Mussolini. Many Americans forget that he was a no-nonsense autocrat who sought to make Italy great again. Perhaps his greatest legacy is his Fascist party's name, embodied by a host of current strongmen leaders, including, of course, Donald Trump. In this collection, scholars and journalists offer highly opinionated essays, curated by Steinmetz-Jenkins, a professor of history and social theory at Wesleyan. The editor begins with an excerpt from Sinclair Lewis' 1935 novel, It Can't Happen Here, which satirizes proto-fascist movements in 1930s America. Then he moves on to Reinhold Niebuhr, followed by Leon Trotsky's 1940 Marxian treatise. Among the more turgid contributions, his analyses of Nazi appeal and capitalist weakness have not been borne out, but he hits the mark in his argument that the absence of a labor party makes revolution unlikely. Novelist Umberto Eco is the most entertaining. In 1942, the young author won a national award for an essay on Mussolini. He explains that, as the first right-wing dictatorship to take over a European country, fascism established the folklore, rhetoric, brutality, and even the fashion. Mussolini himself had no true philosophy (like Trump), but Eco's wry description of the features of typical "Ur-Fascism" may lead some readers to skip the remaining pieces, which mix academic analysis and polemic and conclude that Trump may be a fascist (or not) and that his followers accept some of its features. Other contributors include Samuel Moyn, Robin D.G. Kelley, and Pankaj Mishra. Mostly insightful essays that often preach to the choir. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.