A. James Gregor: diferenças entre revisões
Conteúdo apagado Conteúdo adicionado
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Linha 19:
''The Ideology of Fascism: The Rationale of Totalitarianism'', New York: NY, The Free Press, 1969. ISBN 0029130301, ISBN 978-0029130308.
* [[Benito Mussolini|Mussolini]]
*: ''Whatever one thinks of his Marxism today, Mussolini was accepted by his socialist peers as a Marxist theoretician. He rose to leadership in the Italian Socialist Party at least in part on the basis of his recognized capacity as a socialist intellectual''. — p. 99
Linha 43:
*:''Mussolini was a well-informed and convinced Marxist. His ultimate political convictions represent a reform of classical Marxism in the direction of a restoration of its Hegelian elements''. — p. 333
* Já em 1930 os teóricos fascistas
*:''As early as 1930, Fascist theoreticians had begun to speak of an ''internazionale fascista'', a pan-fascist union of nations. By 1935, Fascist maintained that Fascism recognized that the ravages of war and depression in Europe could only be undone by international ‘antiplutocratic’ reconstruction and argued, as a consequence, that Fascism was to be both ‘patriotic and international at the same time’''. — p. 356
Linha 70:
''Young Mussolini and the Intellectual Origins of Fascism,'' Berkeley: CA University of California Press, 1979. ISBN 0520037995, ISBN 978-0520037991.
* Mussolini
*:''Mussolini was a Marxist ‘heretic'''. — p. xi
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