Значение слова "FASCISM" найдено в 27 источниках
найдено в "Historical Dictionary of modern Italy"
Fascism: translation

   Contemporary Italian history is dominated by the Fascist ventennio (20-year period), when Benito Mussolini led a dictatorship characterized by single-party rule, a pervasive, would-be totalitarian state, a cult of violence and war, and military adventurism. The Fascist period can usefully be divided into five phases. The first phase was the creation of the movement. Italian Fascism was born on 23 March 1919, at a meeting in Piazza di San Sepolcro, Milan, when Mussolini launched the Fasci Italiani di combattimento/ Italian Combat Leagues, which became the Partito Nazionale Fascista/National Fascist Party (PNF) in 1921. In this first phase, Italian Fascism appealed largely to veterans angry with the corruption and indecision of Italy’s traditional elites. The movement’s first platform, written by Mussolini himself, was a blend of socialism and nationalism. It seemingly had little electoral appeal. In the elections of November 1919, Mussolini personally obtained less than 5,000 votes, while the Partito Socialista Italiano/Italian Socialist Party (PSI) and the Catholic Partito Popolare Italiano/Italian Popular Party (PPI) attracted mass followings. The poet Gabriele D’Annunzio, who had seized the contested Adriatic city of Fiume with a private army, seemed a more likely authoritarian leader than Mussolini in 1920. Fascism gained strength between 1920 and 1922 because it became the means by which the PSI’s growing power was smashed, especially in the agricultural areas of the Po River valley, Tuscany, and Apulia. Fascist squads, headed by local warlords or Ras, at Mussolini’s instigation waged war against organized labor and the political left. PSI newspapers, offices, and cultural organizations were raided and burned; strikes were broken by strong-arm tactics. Hundreds of people were killed and thousands were savagely beaten or were humiliated by being given a strong dose of castor oil. Rather than repress the Fascists, however, Giovanni Giolitti sought to coopt Mussolini by including the PNF in the blocco nazionale during the May 1921 general elections.Neither Giolitti nor his successors, Ivanoe Bonomi and Luigi Facta, were prepared to use the full weight of the state against the squads. By the spring of 1922, Fascist squads were taking part in “punitive raids” against entire cities (Bologna, Cremona, Ferrara) to chase out their elected governments and install temporary reigns of terror.
   In October 1922, when King Victor Emmanuel III made Mussolini premier rather than risk a conflict with the Fascists who had marched on Rome, co-option was taken to a new level. Mussolini consolidated his hold on power by passing the Acerbo law, but only moved decisively against the political opposition after the kidnapping and murder of Giacomo Matteotti in June 1924. For six months, the democratic opposition boycotted Parliament, until Mussolini’s leading Ras warned him to take action or risk a rebellion in their ranks. On 3 January 1925, Mussolini took responsibility for the killing and began the process of dismantling the liberal state. Italy under Fascism was a dictatorship, but, despite the fact Mussolini invented the word “totalitarian,” Mussolini’s rule was not absolute. Theoretically, there was to be no pluralism but rather a single party. The state, the economy, and the society were to be bureaucratically, hierarchically, and totally organized, integrating all activities —whether in religion, commerce, arts, leisure hours, or the breeding of children—in subordination to the party-state. The slogan “tutto nello Stato, niente senza lo Stato, tutto per lo Stato” (everything within the State, nothing without the State, everything for the State) illustrated the goal. In fact, there were conspicuous areas of national life in which the intrusion of the state was relatively limited. The monarchy, big business, and, above all, the Church all retained considerable autonomy. By contrast, manual workers were robbed of independent trade unions; young people were militarized from the earliest age in the Balillaand the Avanguardisti; and ordinary citizens spent their leisure in social, sporting, and cultural activities organized by the Istituto nazionale del dopolavoro. Professional advancement, especially as a civil servant, was impossible without PNF membership. Intellectual life was rigidly monitored. University professors were asked to pledge their faith to Mussolini (almost all did), and unauthorized political or cultural activity was sternly punished. Nevertheless, Mussolini’s hold on power did not rely on repression and propaganda alone. Both in Italy and abroad, Fascism evoked widespread admiration for its achievements. The launching of great ocean liners (the Rexand the Conte di Savoia), the more vaunted than real improvement in the punctuality of the rail network, the exploits of Italo Balbo and his fellow aviators, the draining of the Italian marshlands, and the athletic triumphs of the boxer Primo Carnera and the Italian national soccer team all added to Italy’s self-esteem. More important, Fascism was widely perceived as having created, in corporatism, an imaginative structure for dealing with the industrial turmoil sweeping the world.
   From the early 1930s onward, Mussolini strove to radicalize the regime. Such practices as giving the Fascist salute instead of shaking hands, using the “virile” voi (second person plural) instead of the apparently effete lei, and marching with the passo Romano (goosestep) were introduced. By the mid-1930s, Mussolini was both a competitor and a reluctant admirer of what Adolf Hitler was achieving in Nazi Germany. Racial laws against the Jews were introduced in 1938; before then, Fascism had not been especially discriminatory toward Italy’s highly integrated Jewish community, and, indeed, many Jews had actually been active Fascists.
   Claiming that war, for men, was like childbirth for women, Mussolini launched a war of conquest against Ethiopia in 1935 and sent a large expeditionary force to assist Francisco Franco’s military revolt in Spain. Such actions brought him closer to Hitler. In October 1936, the Rome-Berlin Axis was signed; in May 1939, the Axis became the Pact of Steel. Italy did not join the war until June 1940, however, when France was beaten and Great Britain was on the ropes. Italy conducted a strikingly unsuccessful parallel waragainst Britain in North Africa and against Greece. In both cases, Italy had to be rescued by German arms after huge losses.
   Fascism’s wartime losses were what brought the system down. After the invasion of Italian territory in July 1943, the Fascist Grand Council voted on 25 July 1943, to deprive Mussolini of command of the war effort. After Mussolini’s fall, Italy was divided between invading Allied and Nazi armies, with Mussolini heading the puppet Republic of Salo in northern Italy. The ventenniowas over, although it left political scars that smart to this day.
   See also Accademia d’Italia; Aventine Secession; Comitati di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN); Croce, Benedetto; Farinacci, Roberto; Federzoni, Luigi; Foreign Policy; Gentile, Giovanni; Grandi, Dino; Istituto per la Ricostruzione Industriale (IRI); Lateran Pacts; March on Rome; Movimento Sociale Italiano (MSI); Quadrumvirate; Papacy; Resistance; Rocco, Alfredo; Spanish Civil War; Squadrismo; Starace, Achille; World War I; World War II; Youth Movements, Fascist.


найдено в "Англо-русском экономическом словаре"
сущ.
пол., соц. фашизм
а) (социально-политические движения, идеологии и государственные режимы тоталитарного типа с опорой на массовую тоталитарную политическую партию, которая, приходя к власти, становится государственно-монопольной организацией, и непререкаемый авторитет вождя; тотальный, в том числе идеологический, массовый террор, шовинизм, переходящая в геноцид ксенофобия по отношению к чуждым национальным и социальным группам, к враждебным ему ценностям цивилизации)
б) (крайне националистические движения в Италии 1922-1943 гг. и Германии 1933-1945 гг.)
See:
Holocaust, authoritarian personality, Spanish phalanx, falangism, Gini, Corado
* * *
фашизм
..Словарь экономических терминов.

найдено в "Moby Thesaurus"
fascism: translation

Synonyms and related words:
Jim Crow, Jim Crow law, Nazism, anti-Semitism, apartheid, argumentum baculinum, big stick, black power, black supremacy, centralism, chauvinism, class consciousness, class distinction, class hatred, class prejudice, class war, collectivism, color bar, color line, communism, constitutionalism, democratism, despotism, discrimination, domination, domineering, federalism, feudalism, feudality, governmentalism, heavy hand, high hand, imperialism, iron boot, iron hand, iron heel, know-nothingism, male chauvinist, minority prejudice, monarchism, national socialism, neofascism, oppression, parliamentarianism, parliamentarism, pluralism, political principles, race hatred, race prejudice, race snobbery, racial discrimination, racialism, racism, red-baiting, reign of terror, republicanism, royalism, segregation, sex discrimination, sexism, social barrier, social discrimination, socialism, statism, superpatriotism, terrorism, thought control, tyranny, ultranationalism, white power, white supremacy, xenophobia


найдено в "Historical Dictionary of the Netherlands"
Fascism: translation

   As a political doctrine following the Italian example of Benito Mussolini, fascism occupied only a marginal place in Dutch political life during the 1920s and 1930s. In the Netherlands, fascists were divided among dozens of sectarian groups, such as the Verbond van Actualisten (Association of Actualists) and the Algemene (Ned erlandsche) Fascistenbond (General Dutch Association of Fascists). They were never able to win a seat in the elections for the Parlia ment. In addition, they had as their rivals the National Socialists. During recent decades, only very small and politically insignificant groups of neo-Fascists have been active. The ultraright Johannes Gerardus Hendrikus (“Hans”) Janmaat (1934–2002) was a member of Parliament during the 1980s and 1990s.
   See also NATIONAAL SOCIALISTISCHE BEWEGING (NSB).


найдено в "Philosophy dictionary"
fascism: translation

(Lat., fasces, the bundle of rods and axe carried before Roman consuls as insignia of authority) The loose amalgam of aspirations and influences crystallized in the early 20th-century governments of Mussolini in Italy, Hitler in Germany, and General Franco in Spain. Elements include nationalism; hostility to ideals of equality; hatred of minorities, degenerates, and deviants; élitism; hostility towards the ideals of liberalism, and in particular towards freedom of expression; the cult of the charismatic leader or Übermensch ; belief in the destiny of the race; and a love of political symbolism such as uniforms and other emblems of militarism. The whole cocktail is animated by a belief in regeneration through energy and struggle.


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре политической терминологии"
n
фашизм

to eradicate fascism — искоренять фашизм

to pursue fascism — бороться с фашизмом

to revive fascism — возрождать фашизм

- danger of fascism
- naked fascism
- reanimation of fascism
- sharp battles against fascism

найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• Democrats fight it

• Dictatorial system

• Extreme form of government

• Mussolini's ideology

• Mussolini's movement

• Political movement

• A political theory advocating an authoritarian hierarchical government (as opposed to democracy or liberalism)


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре по социологии"
фашизм; идеология и политика националистического толка, дополняемые террором.
* * *
фашизм; идеология и политика националистического толка, дополняемые террором.


найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
[ʹfæʃız(ə)m] n
фашизм


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Мюллера"
Fascism [ˊfæʃɪzǝm] n
фаши́зм


найдено в "Шведско-русском словаре"


{fasj'is:m}

1. фашизм



найдено в "Англо-украинском словаре"


nфашизм


найдено в "Англо-русском социологическом словаре"
Фашизм; идеология и политика националистического толка, дополняемые террором.
найдено в "Новом большом англо-русском словаре"
fascism
[ʹfæʃız(ə)m] n
фашизм



найдено в "Англо-русском словаре общей лексики"
сущ.; полит. фашизм - health fascism
найдено в "Англо-русском словаре Лингвистика-98"
(n) коричневая чума; фашизм
найдено в "Румынско-русском словаре"
s.n. фашизм m.
T: 83