
Contents
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I. General Introduction I. General Introduction
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II. Framework of Analysis II. Framework of Analysis
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III. Starting Point, 1921–1925 III. Starting Point, 1921–1925
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IV. Fascist Policiesthat Affected Agriculture and the Rural Population IV. Fascist Policiesthat Affected Agriculture and the Rural Population
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V. Peasant Responses to Fascism, 1920–1945 V. Peasant Responses to Fascism, 1920–1945
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VI. Legaciesand Continuities VI. Legaciesand Continuities
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Bibliography Bibliography
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7 The Peasant Experience under Italian Fascism
Get accessRoger Absalom is Honorary Research Fellow at the Humanities Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University. His publications include A Strange Alliance: Aspects of Escape and Survival in Italy 1943–1945 (Florence, 1991); Italy since 1800: A Nation in the Balance? (Harlow, 1995); and Perugia Liberata: documenti anglo-americani sull' occupazione alleata di Perugia (1944–1945) (Florence, 2001).
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Published:18 September 2012
Cite
Abstract
The fascist regime was the first system of government in modern Italy to attempt to address the ‘peasant question’ in a systematic fashion. It not only brought to bear upon it the administrative machinery of the state but also, through its policies and propaganda, attempted to convert the peasantry from a perennial threat to social stability into a positive bulwark of the political system the fascist regime was seeking to consolidate. This article describes the starting point of this historical account of peasants in 1921; the fascist policies that affected agriculture and the rural population; and the peasant responses to fascism.
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