Anti-Semitic Fascism(s) to Fascist Anti-Semitism: Jews in Interwar Europe
Anti-Semitic Fascism(s) to Fascist Anti-Semitism: Jews in Interwar Europe
Tuesday, October 20, 20095:00 PM - 6:30 PM (Pacific)
Margaret Jacks Hall
Building 460
Terrace Room
Dr. Aristotle Kallis is a senior lecturer in European Studies at Lancaster University, UK and a well know expert on interwar fascism. Dr. Kallis works specifically
on Italian Fascism and German National Socialism, both individually and
in comparative terms. He researches fascism in generic terms - as an intellectual phenomenon with various national permutations - and
explores its links to indigenous nationalist traditions. His research on fascism
has also extended to different areas, such as totalitarianism,
propaganda, eugenics and genocide. His current project is devoted to Fascist Rome in
the 1922-43 period. This project, which combines urban, cultural and intellectual history, examines the way in which Fascism attempted to re-create 'space' and symbolism in Rome with a view to transforming the
city as a statement of its universal utopianism. It analyses the Fascist intentions (placed in a wider framework of urbanistic debates, both
inside Italy and across Europe/ the world) and examines the extent to which
they were translated into practice in the two decades of Fascist rule.
Jointly sponsored by the Forum on Contemporary Europe, Taube Center for Jewish Studies, and Department of History at Stanford University.