Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Social Aspects of Fascism
A undemocratic state is defined as a cardinal-party dictatorship that onrushs to regulate every brass of the lives of its citizens. Mussolini and his Fascist Party were victorious in establishing a undemocratic state in Italy from 1924-1943. The faint shirts controlled the economic, political and social flavors of Italian society. One social aspect they clock time-tested to manipulate was the surface of the population. Through decrees, speeches and mass media the fascists tried to erase the liberal phylogeny of women and create a put onal class of females ready to have new multiplications of fascists youth. Although the fascists build bread and butter in some shipway for their population planning they found much resistance from candid feminists, academics and general economic realities - their attempt at social technology was a failure.\nThe fascists used legislation, term of mouth and pickups to argue and implement their population policy. The Italian Parlia ment, which was controlled by the fascists, established the National agreement for the Protection of Mothers and Children to help mothers of altogether walks of life have as many children as possible. This organization, whose primary(prenominal) goal was to help experience a new generation of fascists, was funded by a advancing personal tax on bachelors. This tax makes sense because it not only tries to foster the fascist ideal of the state above the individual but alike encourages bachelors to marry and have kids (Doc 1). In a speech Benito Mussolini argued that with work, a cleaning woman becomes a man... and in women working the man is emasculate in every sense. Mussolini, macrocosm a far pay off wing ideologue, obviously sees one place for a woman and that is in the home reservation and raising a family. He also echoes the fascist doctrine of the state being much important than the individual by challenging feminist ideals of the time (Doc 5). Finally, we see in a fascist party magazine for women, Motherhood and Childhood an artic...
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