Buy new:
$117.00$117.00
+ $21.67
shipping
Arrives:
Jan 31 - Feb 22
Ships from: Prime Deals, USA Sold by: Prime Deals, USA
Buy used: $70.75
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle Cloud Reader.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Fascism: The Career of a Concept Hardcover – February 8, 2016
| Paul Gottfried (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
| Price | New from | Used from |
|
Audible Audiobook, Unabridged
"Please retry" |
$0.00
| Free with your Audible trial | |
Enhance your purchase
What does it mean to label someone a fascist? Today, it is equated with denouncing him or her as a Nazi. But as intellectual historian Paul E. Gottfried writes in this provocative yet even-handed study, the term's meaning has evolved over the years. Gottfried examines the semantic twists and turns the term has endured since the 1930s and traces the word's polemical function within the context of present ideological struggles.
Like "conservatism," "liberalism," and other words whose meanings have changed with time, "fascism" has been used arbitrarily over the years and now stands for a host of iniquities that progressives, multiculturalists, and libertarians oppose, even if they offer no single, coherent account of the historic evil they condemn. Certain factors have contributed to the term's imprecise usage, Gottfried writes, including the equation of all fascisms with Nazism and Hitler, as well as the rise of a post-Marxist left that expresses predominantly cultural opposition to bourgeois society and its Christian and/or national components. Those who stand in the way of social change are dismissed as "fascist," he contends, an epithet that is no longer associated with state corporatism and other features of fascism that were once essential but are now widely ignored. Gottfried outlines the specific historical meaning of the term and argues that it should not be used indiscriminately to describe those who hold unpopular opinions. His important study will appeal to political scientists, intellectual historians, and general readers interested in politics and history.
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherNorthern Illinois University Press
- Publication dateFebruary 8, 2016
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions6 x 1 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100875804934
- ISBN-13978-0875804934
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State.Paul Edward GottfriedPaperback$9.85 shipping
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Paul Gottfried's is far and away the best book on fascism I've read in many years."
― Claremont Review of Books"Gottfried's study is particular, nuanced, and multifaceted... a model for the type of work that can earn the right a hearing from more attentive audiences."
― The American Conservative"For historians, [Fascism] offers clear and provocative insights and arguments, and the very detailed notes are especially helpful.... Recommended."
― Choice"Books warning of 'the new fascism' have become a cottage industry among academics. But at least one author, Dr. Paul E. Gottfried, professor emeritus of humanities at Elizabethtown College and editor of Chronicles magazine, takes a more historically informed view."
― Quillette"Gottfried's Fascism: The Career of a Concept is so valuable as a provocation, for it was written to correct the sloppy use of the epithet 'fascist' to condemn whatever politician or movement one finds distasteful."
― Rhetoric Society Quarterly"In these studies, Gottfried notes how, partly because of how varied fascist administrations were, the elements which can be described as characteristic of fascism are actually very few."
― Human EventsReview
"Fascism is a book of remarkable scholarship and sensitivity regarding some exceedingly complex ideas. Gottfried's navigation of the ins and outs of the interwar ideological quarrels in Italy and France is especially masterful."
-- Robert Weissberg, emeritus, University of Illinois at Urbana–ChampaignAbout the Author
Paul E. Gottfried is the retired Horace Raffensperger Professor of Humanities at Elizabethtown College and a Guggenheim recipient. He is the author of numerous books, including The Search for Historical Meaning and, most recently, Leo Strauss and the Conservative Movement in America.
Product details
- Publisher : Northern Illinois University Press; 1st edition (February 8, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0875804934
- ISBN-13 : 978-0875804934
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 0.988 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 1 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,686,591 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,229 in Fascism (Books)
- #12,795 in History & Theory of Politics
- #67,074 in World History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Gottfried wants to correct that and, in a greater sense, remind us that the terms Right and Left have “essentialist” meanings.
The literature on fascism is vast, and Gottfried mentions a lot of scholars on the subject. (My Kindle edition tells me that 58% of the book is notes and an index.) The predominant ones he uses are German Ernst Nolte and American A. James Gregor. They represent two views, respectively, that fascism was “a counterrevolutionary imitation of the revolutionary Left” and a “variant on Marxism” that used nationalism.
Nazis as Marxists?
The Nazi relationship to fascism is not simple or clear cut.
Nolte, the scholar Gottfried most closely agrees with, argues that generic fascism was an “escape from the transcendence” that Marxism offered in its proclamation that humans could be morally transformed and become “more fully human” via a new economic order. Fascism, to Nolte, valued the “primordially collectivist” and “biologically rooted”.
Nazism proclaimed itself a modernizing movement, a revolution based on scientific organization. Not only were those famous autobahns built in Nazi Germany, but, as German historian Rainer Zitelmann has shown, the Nazis increased the wages of the working class, employment was opened to more women, equality of opportunity was emphasized, full employment and paid vacations were instituted. Modern sociology was largely, though this fact was obscured by mostly American propaganda efforts post-World War II, invented in Nazi Germany.
As to Hitler’s eugenics theories, Pomeranian aristocrat Ewald von Kleist-Schmenzin, executed by the Nazi regime two weeks before World War Two ended, sneered that Hitler was a “born democrat” and that his racial theories substituted racial equality for Marxism’s class equality. Hitler was, to him, a despised modernizer who wanted to do away with a hierarchical and agrarian past.
Noted scholar of totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt, also did not regard Nazis as fascists and saw them and Stalin’s Russia as totalitarian regimes, something apart from fascism. Indeed, Stalin and Hitler seemed engaged in a sort of horrible feedback loop of imitation. Stalin, in the Ukraine, engineered mass murder and had labor camps. Hitler came up with a more efficient system of genocide and labor camps. Stalin, post-war, copied Hitler’s anti-Semitism.
American and ex-Trotskyite James Burnham saw fascism, communism, and social democracy as three manifestations of the managerial state which the post-capitalist world was moving to. In a world atomized by ethnic dilution, mobility, and capitalism, populations would grant their allegiance to a managerial state governed by a new elite. (It seems, to me, a perceptive description of current trends though laid out in 1940.)
Generic fascism, argues Gottfried, was primarily a Franco-Italian creation, and he seems to agree with the scholar of Spanish fascism, Stanley Payne, that it had a fairly consistent list from country to country on what it opposed: parliamentarianism, left-wing socialism, internationalism (except in a form acceptable to the fascists), free market capitalism, Freemasons, and pacifists.” Note that anti-Semitism and genocide are not in the list. Indeed, several early Italian fascists were Jews, and it was only after Mussolini’s pact with Hitler that restrictions were placed on Jews in Italy, and their deportation to concentration camps occurred only after German troops undertook it in Italy.
However, caution must be exercised in precisely defining fascism. It was a popular movement that had to appeal to different concerns in different countries.
Gottfried convincingly argues that fascism, whatever its antecedents in German and French thought prior to the Great War, only existed beween the wars and only in Europe. After WWII, fascism’s cult of violence tied to nationalism simply was unworkable under the US-Soviet hegemony. Third World regimes sometimes described as fascism after World War Two were not. Its welfare state proposals were successfully enacted by its enemies on the Left, so there was no real public support for fascistic economics.
Gottfried comes down firmly on the side of fascism as a counterrevolutionary movement of the Right. Those, like Jonah Goldberg in his book Liberal Fascism and American enemies of America’s New Deal (which was inspired by elements of Mussolini’s Italy), who claimed fascists were leftists ignore the Right’s history.
Most major political parties of the Western world, whether Right or Left, have accepted the assumptions of the Enlightenment, an Enlightenment not only manifested in the founding of America but the French Revolution, the model of Leftist revolution. The old Right, Gottfried reminds us, was a reaction against what rightists regarded as a materialist world view, and it was driven by opposition to universal rights; and the desire to preserve historic identities. The Right always viewed with suspicion or contempt the operation of parliamentary systems that allowed vested economic interests and professional politicians free play.
There are other points of interest in this book.
There a clear explication of the Frankfurt School’s influence on helping to make “fascism” a term of abuse for anyone who opposed their mutant offspring of Freudianism and Marxism and its agenda of human transcendence via no-holds-barred erotic freedom – which was to be brought about the abolition of sexual norms, capitalism, and the family. (Freud himself argued repression was necessary to civilization.)
Gottfried also delves into the strange offshoot of “international fascism” as explicated in the “most compelling fascist novel ever written”, Pierre Drieu La Rochelle’s Gilles. British fascist Oswald Mosley shows up here with his efforts at international fascism before and after World War Two. His efforts after the war to “rebuild Europe as ‘one nation’” lend an ironic absurdity to recent Brexit proponents being labeled as “fascists”.
Gottfried looks at the notion of whether fascists ever, like leftists, had an idea of a utopia. Western thought has famously embraced the idea of linear progress since St. Augustine’s The City of God, a book that influenced Karl Marx. Fascism did not, it seemed, envision an end point of history, but constant struggle. Today’s reformers would violently seize power. Their descendants would become corrupt and have to be overthrown again. The fascist future was one of cycles. Fascism looked to a past, not a transcendent future. This is another reason why Nazism was not fascism.
A highly recommended primer on a complex subject.
Similarly, by studying the evolution of words, one gains insight into the culture’s evolution as well.
Fascism: The Career of a Concept is authored by Paul Gottfried, a humanities professor emeritus at Elizabethtown College. Fascism tracks the evolution of the word “fascism,” how use of the term has changed compared to its twentieth century roots, and how the word’s evolution reflects changes in American society and Western civilization.
‘What Evil Lurks’
Fascism may be challenging for readers not normally interested in political philosophy, but Gottfried’s extensive research, which covers more than 50 studies and books on the topic, makes the read well worth the effort, especially for those seeking a fascinating and unique peek into the philosophy of what Orson Welles’ radio character, The Shadow, famously intoned as “what evil lurks in the minds of men.”
Just as the meanings of words such as “conservatism” and “liberalism” have changed over time, Gottfried says the term “fascism” is too often used arbitrarily and is now regularly employed to characterize policies opposed by modern liberalism. In contrast to this use of the term, as one of condemnation against those who oppose expansion of government, Gottfried notes modern “fascism” is a word coined by Benito Mussolini and other partisan leaders. They used it to express their idea of an active and populist government’s responsibility to restrict economic behavior and promote nationalism.
“Those who stand in the way of social change and whose ‘bigotry’ must be addressed and are conveniently dismissed in Western Europe as ‘fascist,’ an epithet that has an added value because it is no longer associated with state corporatism and other now widely ignored but once-essential features of fascism,” Gottfried writes. “Calling someone a fascist today means that he or she is a Nazi.”
Words and Meanings
In reading the book, one will learn fascism and Nazism, another theory of government closely associated with World War II-era Europe, are commonly and incorrectly conflated. Although Mussolini was, by definition, a fascist, Nazi Germany operated under a more eclectic totalitarian philosophy, borrowing from fellow dictator Joseph Stalin’s operational theories and common corporatism.
Unlike Nazism’s völkisch (populist) quest to reclaim the glory of esoteric ancestor races, such as the Hyperboreans, fascism is a rejection of religion in favor of scientism, Gottfried writes.
“When Italian fascists spoke of building a new age of the world, commencing with Mussolini’s March on Rome in 1922, they were not simply expressing nostalgia for past Latin glory: they believed themselves to be living in a modern society that looked forward to a new political order that was not parasitic on Roman symbols and Roman notions of authority,” Gottfried wrote. “Fascists considered themselves the beneficiaries of the Italian democratic revolutionaries of the nineteenth century, and it was their destiny to erect a state-of-the-art regime that differed equally from old-fashioned Italian principalities and corrupt liberal parliamentary administrations. They also incorporated the secularizing tendencies that had become decisive in the West starting with the Enlightenment, and fascists proposed, however tentatively, a post-Christian vision heavily shaped by science and religious skepticism.”
Mirror Ideological Image
Gottfried says fascism is essentially a twisted, funhouse-mirror image of twentieth century liberal theories of humanity’s perfectibility. Despite fascists’ strong opposition to the revolutionary left and the common characterization of fascism as “right-wing,” fascism was radically different from modern-day conservatism.
“Although fascists could claim a multifarious genealogy going back to nineteenth century counterrevolutionaries, critics of rationalism, and even Italian futurists, its ideology was contrived to lend credibility to a movement of resistance,” Gottfried wrote. “Unlike Marxism and Christianity, fascism was an essentially reactive movement, and its oppositional nature could be grasped most clearly by looking at its ‘escape from transcendence.’ Fascists rejected a leitmotif that appeared in Christian theology and throughout the revolutionary Left, namely that human beings could be morally transformed and raised above their natural conditions to become more fully human or less beastlike.
“The fascists exalted what was primordially collectively, or biologically rooted, and in the end pieced together a counter-vision to the teachings of their enemies,” Gottfried wrote.
Warning from the Past
Gottfried says although fascism was once a revolutionary movement, it is now exceedingly rare, existing “in the West as an isolated or only remotely approximated curiosity.”
In the United States and other Western cultures, there are no mainstream political parties or movements resembling anything accurately described as “fascist.” Instead of a present danger to nations’ character, this flavor of tyranny casts its long shadow across the world as a reminder of the abuses and mistakes of the past.
Although the book may be challenging to some readers, Fascism: The Career of a Concept is a meticulously researched primer on the true history of one of the world’s worst ideologies. Upon finishing the book, readers will emerge with a firmer understanding of history, philosophy, and the ways in which words shape culture and reality.
Jay Lehr, Ph.D. (jlehr@heartland.org) is science director of The Heartland Institute.





