Acknowledgements
Introduction
What Do Words Matter? Preliminary Reflections on Fascism,
Socialism, Liberalism and Semantics
1. The Liberal Split: Divorcing the Economic from the Political
Liberalism and Democracy in the Longue Durée
Putting Property under Locke and Key
From Constant to Donoso Cortés
Pareto: on Foxes and Musso-Lions
Engels and Gumplowicz Outlining the Overthrow from Above
2. Liberal Economics, Fascist Politics: “A Wonderful Wedlock”
Spengler: The “Will to Property”
Hitler and Liberalism: a “Wonderful Harmony” of Politics and
Economics
Spengler and Hitler: the Bookworm Mistakes His Place
After Fascism: J. S. Schapiro and the Illusive Death of the Dismal
Science
3. Anti-Liberal Liberals—I (Moeller van den Bruck, Proudhon,
Carlyle)
The Bourgeois Spirit of the Germanic Ideology
Outsiders-Insiders: Proudhon and Carlyle
4. Anti-Liberal Liberals—II (Schmitt, Sorel)
Carl Schmitt: A Democratic Anti-Liberal?
The Strange Case of Georges Sorel
5. Liberalism and Fascism between Myths and Reality I
Liberal Myth No. 1: Fascism as Tyranny of the Majority
Liberal Myth No. 2: Collectivist Liberalism, Individualist
Fascism?
6. Liberalism and Fascism between Myths and Reality II
Liberal Myth No. 3: The Origins of the Fascist “Big Lie”
Liberal Myth No. 4: Fascism as a Nationalistic Attack on
Epilogue
Sub-Man, Underman, Untermensch:
Fascism as an International Co-production
References
Index
Features in Critical Sociology
Promotion targeting progressive Sociological Journals
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking
engagements
Ishay Landa, Ph.D. (2004) in History, Ben-Gurion University,
Israel, is Visiting Senior Lecturer of History at the Israeli Open
University. He has published on Nietzscheanism, Marxism, political
theory and popular culture, including The Overman in the
Marketplace (Lexington, 2007).
“How many panegyrical books have been written about liberalism?
Ishay Landa presents us, in contrast, with a profane account, one
which investigates, precisely and pungently, the real interests
that have inspired this political movement, and does not shy away
from depicting its disquieting facets, starting with its role as
the “apprentice” who elicits the “sorcerer”– i.e. fascism.”
—Domenico Losurdo, author of Liberalism: A Counter-History
"As a prime target of fascist attacks, liberalism has largely
avoided serious interrogation over its shared responsibility for
the rise of its tormentor. Working his way through a dozen major
liberal thinkers and myths, Ishay Landa's equally scholarly and
readable treatise should put an end once and for all to this
undeserved exception. Brimming with important insights about our
darker past that convey essential lessons for the dimming present
... HIGHLY RECOMMENDED !!! "
—Bertell Ollman, author of Dance of the Dialectic: Steps in Marxist
Method.
"This book is a significant example of de-dichotomization […]
Scholarly research on fascism continues to be largely defined by an
ossified dichotomy […]: either liberalism or fascism. Landa’s book
goes against the current of these prejudices. Its strength lies in
the precision of a re-reading, not only of Nietzsche […] but of
countless other authors, whose habitual interpretation is marred by
preconceptions. Among such authors, to name only the better known,
are Spengler, Carl Schmitt, Sorel, Pareto, Burke, Donoso Cortés,
Carlye, Tocqueville, Pirandello. In these readings, the author has
compiled treasures which may transform the poverty of the political
history of ideas into riches."
—Prof. Bernhard H. F. Taureck (University of Braunschweig,
Germany)
How many panegyrical books have been written about liberalism?
Ishay Landa presents us, in contrast, with a profane account, one
which investigates, precisely and pungently, the real interests
that have inspired this political movement, and does not shy away
from depicting its disquieting facets, starting with its role as
the apprentice” who elicits the sorcerer” i.e. fascism.”
Domenico Losurdo, author of Liberalism: A Counter-History
"As a prime target of fascist attacks, liberalism has largely
avoided serious interrogation over its shared responsibility for
the rise of its tormentor. Working his way through a dozen major
liberal thinkers and myths, Ishay Landa's equally scholarly and
readable treatise should put an end once and for all to this
undeserved exception. Brimming with important insights about our
darker past that convey essential lessons for the dimming present
... HIGHLY RECOMMENDED !!! "
Bertell Ollman, author of Dance of the Dialectic: Steps in Marxist
Method.
"This book is a significant example of de-dichotomization [ ]
Scholarly research on fascism continues to be largely defined by an
ossified dichotomy [ ]: either liberalism or fascism. Landa’s book
goes against the current of these prejudices. Its strength lies in
the precision of a re-reading, not only of Nietzsche [ ] but of
countless other authors, whose habitual interpretation is marred by
preconceptions. Among such authors, to name only the better known,
are Spengler, Carl Schmitt, Sorel, Pareto, Burke, Donoso Cortés,
Carlye, Tocqueville, Pirandello. In these readings, the author has
compiled treasures which may transform the poverty of the political
history of ideas into riches."
Prof. Bernhard H. F. Taureck (University of Braunschweig, Germany)
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