Where can I read about National Syndicalism?
Mussolini
>>1227138
Wouldn't that lean more towards fascism?
>>1227210
I don't think so.
>>1227215
Cool, I'll check it out.
>>1227210
Fascists adopted national syndicalism. Mussolini talks extensively about it.
>>1227210
This is officially the most retarded post on this board
>>1226929
Somewhere in the fiction section probably.
>>1226929
I'm currently reading The Anatomy of Fascism by Robert O. Paxton. He touches on the subject every now and then when dealing with the origins of Fascism in Italy, but the book is as the title suggests focusing on something else.
>>1226929
Roberts, David D. The Syndicalist Tradition and Italian Fascism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1979.
>Traces the step-by-step evolution of a number of socialist intellectuals and labor organizers from the heterodox Marxist left to fascism, showing how their diagnoses and prescriptions gradually came to elude their Marxist framework, turning into what became fascism. Shows that the current was not quickly marginalized, as had long been assumed, but played a significant role in giving Italian Fascism an abiding radical thrust and, more particularly, a corporativist direction.
Pinto, António Costa. The Blue Shirts: Portuguese Fascists and the New State. Boulder, CO: Social Science Monographs, 2000.
>Studies the core fascist movement in Portugal, the national syndicalism led by Rolão Preto, and its growing tensions with the Salazar regime. As it was forced into Salazar’s “new state” in the 1930s, the movement’s radical wing turned to active opposition. A concluding chapter places Portuguese national syndicalism in international context, comparing it with comparable movements elsewhere during the interwar period.