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>> No.17365919 [View]
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>> No.17324571 [View]
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>>17324415
Evola, Mishima and Guenon aren’t fascists (and become less and less relevant to fascism in the order in which you’ve written them).

A genealogy of the intellectual development of fascism will include people like Georges Sorel and members of the Cercle Proudhon and other leftists who can’t uncontroversially be called fascist but maybe proto-fascist.

For a general outline try pic related, as well as Zeev Sternhell’s The Birth of Fascist Ideology (for Italian intellectuals like Gentile, d’Annunzio, Marinetti, etc.) and Neither Right Nor Left: Fascist Ideology in France (for French ones like Valois, de Man, Déat, Brasillach, Rochelle, etc.)

generally there were many notable fascist artists and intellectuals in France and Italy, like Celine and Rebatet or Ungaretti and Pirandello. There were some in Germany (Schmitt, Benn) but not as many (as far as I can tell - maybe taboos have left them unrecognised and untranslated). And in the European altogether there were many fascist sympathetic writers like Ezra Pound, Knut Hamsun, Wyndham Lewis, Salvador Dali, Gertrude Stein and so on.

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