The Global Impact of the March on Rome - I giornata
From Delia Legittimo
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From Delia Legittimo
Opening Remarks
Filippo Focardi
(Head of the University Centre for the history of the Resistance and the
Contemporary Age – University of Padua)
Gianluigi Baldo (Head
of the Department of Historical and Geographic Sciences and the Ancient World –
University of Padua)
Elena Pariotti (Head
of the Department of Political Science, Law and International Studies – University
of Padua)
Introduction: Giulia Albanese (University of Padua), Rethinking the global impact of March on Rome
Panel I: Post-war and Fascism - Chair: John Horne (Trinity College Dublin)
Marco Mondini (University of Padua), War after the War. Fascism between Patriotic
Remobilization and Militarization of the Italian Society
Maximiliano
Fuentes Codera (University of Girona), ‘Wilsonian Disappointment’ and
anti-liberalism in Spain: Postwar, Fascism, and the coup d’état of Primo de
Rivera (1917-1923)
Blasco Sciarrino (Central European University, Budapest/Vienna), Disciples
of Italian Authoritarianism: Anti-democratic Romanian Great War Veterans and
their Transnational Influences, 1920-1938
Panel II: The European Impact of the March on Rome-1 - Chair: Matteo Millan (University of Padua)
Alessandro Saluppo (University of Padua), The red dragon and the black shirts
Francesca Cavarocchi University of Florence), The reception of Italian fascism in France: representations, political
relations, transnational dynamics
Aristotle Kallis (Keele University), A seismic non-event: the reception and impact of the rise of Italian
Fascism in interwar Greece
Panel III: The European Impact of the March on Rome- 2 - Chair: Marco Bresciani (University of Florence)
Jakub Drabik (Institute of History, Slovak Academy of Sciences), The March on Rome and Czech fascism
Balázs Juhász (Eötvös Loránd
University, Budapest), Hungary and the
March on Rome, an event that actually changed nothing
Grzegorz Krzywiec (Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw), Fascism goes East Central Europe.
Reactions to Rome’s march and the evolution of political culture in interwar
Poland (1922-1931)