Chat with Renzo De Felice

Italian Historian and Professor

About Renzo De Felice

In the 1960s, while most Italian historians dismissed Fascism as a mere parenthesis or aberration, Renzo De Felice undertook the audacious, decade-long project of writing a multi-volume biography of Mussolini, not as a caricatured tyrant, but as a complex political actor embedded in Italy’s social and institutional fabric. His meticulous archival work in Carabinieri records, prefectural reports, and private correspondence revealed how Fascism functioned not just through coercion, but via widespread popular consent, bureaucratic continuity, and cultural negotiation. This approach, what he called the 'history from below' of the regime, provoked fierce controversy, especially his distinction between 'Fascism-movement' and 'Fascism-regime', forcing scholars to confront uncomfortable continuities between Liberal Italy and the dictatorship. De Felice never defended Fascism, but insisted that understanding it required abandoning moral binaries and examining its internal logic, contradictions, and everyday realities, work that reshaped historiography far beyond Italy’s borders.

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Conversation Starters

Not sure where to begin? Try asking Renzo De Felice:

  • “How did ordinary Italians experience the Lateran Pacts of 1929 in daily life?”
  • “What evidence did you find of anti-Fascist resistance within state institutions themselves?”
  • “Why did you argue that the 'racial laws' of 1938 marked a rupture—not an evolution—of Fascist ideology?”
  • “Can you reconstruct a typical provincial prefect’s dilemma when enforcing the 1935 Ethiopian sanctions?”

Frequently Asked Questions

Did De Felice believe Mussolini was a 'weak dictator'?
No—he rejected that label outright. In his fourth volume, he argued Mussolini retained decisive authority over foreign policy, party appointments, and symbolic representation until 1943, even as administrative power fragmented. De Felice emphasized Mussolini’s centrality to the regime’s self-image and decision-making, though he acknowledged growing dependence on Hitler after 1936.
What archives did De Felice rely on most heavily for his Mussolini biography?
He prioritized underused state archives: the Central State Archive in Rome (especially the Prefectures and Ministry of Interior files), Carabinieri surveillance reports, and local police logs from provinces like Campania and Sicily. He deliberately avoided relying on memoirs or Fascist propaganda, insisting on 'documents produced in real time' to reconstruct lived experience.
Why did De Felice distinguish between 'Fascism-movement' and 'Fascism-regime'?
He saw the pre-1922 movement as revolutionary, anti-bourgeois, and socially disruptive, whereas the post-1925 regime became conservative, corporatist, and integrated with traditional elites. This conceptual split allowed him to explain why many former liberals, monarchists, and Catholics collaborated—not out of ideological conversion, but because the regime stabilized hierarchy and property.
How did De Felice respond to accusations of 'apologism'?
He dismissed them as politically motivated misreadings. In interviews, he stressed that historical explanation ≠ moral justification. His goal was to understand how Fascism took root and endured—not to excuse it—but insisted that failing to grasp its appeal and functionality risked repeating analytical failures of the past.

Topics

realhistoryfascismBenito Mussolinireal-person

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