Om Mussolini's National Project in Argentina
During the 1920s and 1930s, MussoliniΓÇÖs fascist regime attempted to promote fascist ItalyΓÇÖs national project in Argentina, bombarding the republic with its propaganda. Although politically a failure, this propaganda provoked a debate over the idea of a national identity outside the nation-state and the potential roles that citizens living abroad could play in their country of origin. In propagating an Italian national identity within another sovereign state, MussoliniΓÇÖs initiative also inspired heated debate among native Argentines over their own national project as a nation of immigrants. Using the experiences of MussoliniΓÇÖs efforts in Argentina as its case study, this book demonstrates how national projects take on different meanings once they enter a contested public space. It details how both members of the Italian community as well as native Argentines reshaped ItalyΓÇÖs national discourse from abroad by entangling it with ArgentinaΓÇÖs own national project. In exploring the way in which nations are imagined, constructed, and recast both from above as well as from below, MussoliniΓÇÖs National Project in Argentina offers new perspectives on the politics of identity formation while providing a transatlantic example of the dynamic interplay between the Italian state and its emigrant communities. It is in short, a transnational perspective on what it means to belong to a nation.
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