The Enemy of the New Man: Homosexuality in Fascist Italy

Author:   Lorenzo Benadusi ,  Suzanne Dingee ,  Jennifer Pudney
Publisher:   University of Wisconsin Press
ISBN:  

9780299283902


Pages:   424
Publication Date:   30 April 2012
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Enemy of the New Man: Homosexuality in Fascist Italy


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Overview

In this first in-depth historical study of homosexuality in Fascist Italy, Lorenzo Benadusi brings to light immensely important archival documents regarding the sexual politics of the Italian Fascist regime; he adds new insights to the study of the complex relationships of masculinity, sexuality, and Fascism; he explores the connections between new Fascist values and preexisting Italian traditional and Roman Catholic views on morality; he documents both the Fascist regime’s denial of the existence of homosexuality in Italy and its clandestine strategies and motivations for repressing and imprisoning homosexuals; he uncovers the ways that accusations of homosexuality (whether true or false) were used against political and personal enemies; and above all, he shows how homosexuality was deemed the enemy of the Fascist “New Man,” an ideal of a virile warrior and dominating husband vigorously devoted to the “political” function of producing children for the Fascist state. Benadusi investigates the regulation and regimentation of gender in Fascist Italy, and the extent to which, in uneasy concert with the Catholic Church, the regime engaged in the cultural and legal engineering of masculinity and femininity. He cites a wealth of unpublished documents, official speeches, letters, coerced confessions, private letters and diaries, legal documents, and government memos to reveal and analyze how the orders issued by the regime attempted to protect the “integrity of the Italian race.” For the first time, documents from the Vatican archives illuminate how the Catholic Church dealt with issues related to homosexuality during the Fascist period in Italy.

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Author:   Lorenzo Benadusi ,  Suzanne Dingee ,  Jennifer Pudney
Publisher:   University of Wisconsin Press
Imprint:   University of Wisconsin Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.759kg
ISBN:  

9780299283902


ISBN 10:   0299283909
Pages:   424
Publication Date:   30 April 2012
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

<p> A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History


<p> The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination


An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with 'strengthening the race'; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. --Journal of Contemporary History The study is incredibly rich in information thanks to Benadusi's sustained archival research. . . . Its main strengths are the breadth of its scope--both in range of issues tackled and in chronological reach--and the detail provided. --Historian Journal The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination This translation of Lorenzo Benadusi's weighty study . . . is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on dissident sexualities in Italy. --The Historian A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with strengthening the race; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. Journal of Contemporary History A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History This translation of Lorenzo Benadusi s weighty study . . . is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on dissident sexualities in Italy. The Historian The study is incredibly rich in information thanks to Benadusi s sustained archival research. . . . Its main strengths are the breadth of its scope both in range of issues tackled and in chronological reach and the detail provided. Historian Journal The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini s totalitarian experiment in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist New Man, offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini s totalitarian experiment in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist New Man, offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination


An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with 'strengthening the race'; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. --Journal of Contemporary History This translation of Lorenzo Benadusi's weighty study . . . is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on dissident sexualities in Italy. --The Historian The study is incredibly rich in information thanks to Benadusi's sustained archival research. . . . Its main strengths are the breadth of its scope--both in range of issues tackled and in chronological reach--and the detail provided. --Historian Journal A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with strengthening the race; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. Journal of Contemporary History A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History This translation of Lorenzo Benadusi s weighty study . . . is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on dissident sexualities in Italy. The Historian The study is incredibly rich in information thanks to Benadusi s sustained archival research. . . . Its main strengths are the breadth of its scope both in range of issues tackled and in chronological reach and the detail provided. Historian Journal The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini s totalitarian experiment in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist New Man, offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini s totalitarian experiment in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist New Man, offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination


An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with 'strengthening the race'; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. --Journal of Contemporary History This translation of Lorenzo Benadusi's weighty study . . . is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on dissident sexualities in Italy. --The Historian The study is incredibly rich in information thanks to Benadusi's sustained archival research. . . . Its main strengths are the breadth of its scope--both in range of issues tackled and in chronological reach--and the detail provided. --Historian Journal A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with strengthening the race; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. Journal of Contemporary History This translation of Lorenzo Benadusi s weighty study . . . is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on dissident sexualities in Italy. The Historian The study is incredibly rich in information thanks to Benadusi s sustained archival research. . . . Its main strengths are the breadth of its scope both in range of issues tackled and in chronological reach and the detail provided. Historian Journal A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini s totalitarian experiment in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist New Man, offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini s totalitarian experiment in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist New Man, offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination A brilliant, luminously eloquent study of the unique nature of Italian fascism's efforts to manage masculinity, homo- and heterosexual alike, but also much more than that. Breathtaking in the scope of its source materials and the acuity of its analyses, The Enemy of the New Man advances the history of Catholicism and the comparative history of fascism, and above all offers numerous insights into how post-liberal and totalitarian systems work through sexual politics. --Dagmar Herzog, author of Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History The Enemy of the New Man offers many rare insights into Mussolini's totalitarian 'experiment' in actively shaping the laws and cultural codes that regulated gender and sexuality during the Fascist period in Italy. Benadusi goes well below the surface rhetoric about the virility of the Fascist 'New Man, ' offering an important new understanding of actual practices of sexual repression during the Fascist period and the specific legal and punitive measures elaborated for the regimentation of the sexual lives of Italians. It is a book that takes many risks and offers significant rewards. --Patrick Rumble, author of Allegories of Contamination


An important book for the insight it yields, not only into the history of homosexuality in modern Italy, but into key aspects of the fascist project: its cult of virility and accompanying misogyny; its obsession with strengthening the race; its complicated relationship with the Catholic Church and the Italian bourgeoisie; its repressive tendencies; and, above all, the horizons and limits of its totalitarian aspirations. <i>Journal of Contemporary History</i>


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Lorenzo Benadusi is assistant professor of human sciences at the University of Bergamo in Italy.

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