Italian neopatriotism: Debating national identity in the 1990s |
| |
Authors: | Silvana Patriarca |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of History , University of Florida , 4131 Turlington Hall, PO Box 11732, Gainesville, FL, 32611 |
| |
Abstract: | This article discusses some of the distinguishing features of the debate over national identity that took place in Italy in the 1990s. Reacting against the threats of the Lega Nord and in response to the new ideological and political landscape of the post-Cold War order, a number of Italian intellectuals rediscovered the value of patriotism. Searching for the origins of the Italians' allegedly weak sense of national identity, some questioned the Resistance and the party system that originated from it. While this historical revisionism has been the object of well-deserved criticism, there is another type of thematization of identity which has received less attention: it deploys the old notion of an 'Italian character', which appears frequently in the press and the media. The article shows that this discourse, too, is a way of articulating patriotism, and then reflects on the meaning that this reconfiguration of ideologies and identities acquires in the new context, both domestic and international. |
| |
Keywords: | extreme Italian right fascism neo-fascism memory of fascism anti-zionism |
|
|