5
Fascist politics and literary criticism
Ortwin de Graef, Dirk De Geest and
Eveline Vanfraussen
Fascist aesthetics – more precisely, aesthetics informed by fascist conceptions
of nation, society and human essence – is intricately and insidiously bound up
with twentieth-century critical thought. This chapter discusses the origins
and significance of fascist elements in twentieth-century criticism and aes-
thetics. It offers an analysis of theories of art expressive of, or simply receptive
to, fascist ideology, taking the Belgian national context as a case study in the
growth, diffusion and cultural resonance of fascist ideas.
The concept of fascism
The term ‘fascism’ derives its force from an incongruous yet potent mixture
of novelty and imprecision. Arriving on the scene in 1919, Mussolini’s
Fascismo styled itself as a decisive tear in the mottled purple fabric with
which liberal, conservative and socialist ideologies failed to cover the expanse
of the political; it rapidly attained the status of a viable ideological alterna-
tive backed up by a distinct political force whose ‘March on Rome’ in
October 1922 made it the first fascist movement ‘autonomously to “seize”
power’.
1
‘Fascism’ has retained its significance as the name for a distinct, rad-
ically new political phenomenon, notwithstanding the semantic confusion
wrought through its use as a generic term. Paradoxically, the generic term
‘fascism’ still has the performative power of a proper name, despite, on the
one hand, its loose usage as a catch-all label for ‘right-wing’ or even just gen-
erally ‘unpleasant’ ideological beliefs, and, on the other hand, the numerous
exercises in terminological hygiene seeking to distinguish between the
dubious privilege of the proper name and the generic features constituting
the ‘fascist minimum’.
2
The problematic status of the generic notion of fascism is typically
thematised with reference to Germany and France. While it is commonly
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1
Roger Griffin, The Nature of Fascism (London: Pinter, 1991), p. 21.
2
Zeev Sternhell, Ni droite, ni gauche: l’idéologie fasciste en France, rev. edn (Brussels:
Complexe, 1987), p. 57. Unless otherwise indicated, all translations into English are ours.
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