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Index
ENGLISH ABSTRACT
Delio Cantimori (1904-1966) was one of the most important Italian historians
of the twentieth century. His studies on sixteenth-century religious history,
on Italian 'Jacobinism' and on the various projects for social reform
in Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, on Marx and Marxism,
on the history of Italian and European culture in the early modern era
put him in a leading position in Italian historiography, from the 1930s
to the end of the 1960s. But this vast historiographical enterprise is
not the only reason for the fascination which Cantimori exercised, directly
or indirectly, over generations of Italian historians, nor does it explain
why he still arouses so much interest among students of twentieth-century
Italian intellectual history. Cantimori was much more intimately connected
to political events than most of the historians of his generation. Especially
in the Fascist period, he often wrote on political topics in essays, reviews
and critical analyses. In some respects, his complex evolution, from his
youthful republicanism inspired by the nineteenth-century republican ideologist
and agitator Giuseppe Mazzini to revolutionary Fascism, and then to Communism,
is an exemplary case of the ideological evolution of important sections
of the Italian intelligentsia of the twentieth century.
Michele Ciliberto (Intellettuali e Fascismo. Saggio su Delio Cantimori,
Bari, 1977) was the first to start research in that direction, especially
in the two initial chapters of his 1977 much-discussed book, where the
risk was of propounding a teleological interpretation of Cantimori's long
journey through Fascism and of its conclusion, much as if this could be
seen as an itinerarium mentis in Deum, gradually leading to the
communist militancy. The recent upsurge of studies due to the separate
publication as a volume of a collection of Cantimori's-1927-1942 political
writings and to the reprinting of Eretici italiani del Cinquecento
(originally appeared in 1939) has instead followed different routes. Some
scholars (A. Prosperi, R. Fubini, A. Rotondò, C. Vivanti) brought
their attention to bear on strictly historiographical problems, on the
research about early modern Italian heretics and on its significance in
the study of sixteenth-century religious life. Those who have concentrated
themselves mostly on Cantimori's political writings emphasised on their
part the importance of his 'German' essays, his articles on the late-1920s
right wing youth movement up to the very first years of Nazi regime, with
its myths and ideologists: in so doing they followed chiefly Luisa Mangoni's
idea of the central importance of Cantimori's reflection on Germany as
a clue to interpreting his later production. Prosperi's and Mangoni's
works gave also a great documentary contribution on Cantimori's politico-intellectual
activity to 1943, especially on the basis of materials belonging to the
historian's personal archive, now undergoing a complete inventory at the
Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa and consequently unavailable for the
time being to the scholars' inspection. Some important documents concerning
the historian's relationships with Giovanni Gentile were recently presented
also by Paolo Simoncelli (Cantimori, Gentile e la Normale di Pisa.
Profili e documenti, Milano, 1994). The Author of the present essay
intends to bring the debate back to the fundamental problem of Cantimori's
Fascism and attempts at explaining his tormented political and intellectual
itinerary, in the belief that his very diverse political and ideological
options share nonetheless some basic elements to be found in his personality
and culture and in the ideas he developed on contemporary problems. The
Author also strives also not to insulate Cantimori's political reflection
from his historical production and tries to distinguish the not always
apparent and obvious links between these two fields of the historian's
work.
Cantimori himself often remarked on the importance of his upbringing
in a highly politicized family milieu in Romagna, an Italian region in
which political conflict was very intense and sometimes violent, with
a strong 'subversive', Mazzini-inspired and republican tradition which
lasted more than a century. Carlo Cantimori (1878-1963), Delio's father
– a teacher and journalist – was for a long time a local and national
leader of the Republican party, a political force which was radically
critical of the post-Risorgimento Italian political order. He was the
author of a book of some interest on Giuseppe Mazzini's thought, published
in 1904 and re-issued in 1922, and of a great number of essays and newspaper
articles on Mazzini. His evolution is in some respect typical: a positivist
in his youth, he was rapidly influenced by the new cultural climate which
asserted itself in Italy (and in Europe) at the beginning of the twentieth
century, the so-called 'rebirth of idealism'. In 1910 he started to look
with interest at the work of Giovanni Gentile (rather than that of Croce,
who instead opposed the Mazzinian legacy); he followed attentively the
debates of the cultural and political reviews of those years, such as
Giuseppe Prezzolini's La Voce and Gaetano Salvemini's L'Unità.
Together with all of this cultural world, Carlo Cantimori was a firm supporter
of Italy's intervention in the First World War in 1915, not just for the
conquest of 'unredeemed' territories, but to break the Italian political
order and eliminate the political forces which had run the country in
the so-called 'Giolitti era'. In this wide political front in favour of
Italian intervention in the war, Gentile became, after 1917, one of the
most respected figures. In those years Gentile focused his political thought
on Mazzini as a man and as a thinker, re-interpreted from an idealist
and anti-individualistic Etatist point of view. Gentile's writings on
Mazzini in 1919 strongly influenced Carlo Cantimori's thought. He revised
his 1904 book on the basis of Gentile's influence, and published it a
few months before the March on Rome of 1922. When Fascism rose, Carlo
Cantimori initially opposed it and in 1924 he even planned to emigrate
abroad. But in 1926 he joined the Fascist Party, and from that moment
onwards he was a convinced republican and Mazzini-inspired Fascist. In
1944 he still saw Mazzini's 'Repubblica romana' of 1849 as a forerunner
of Mussolini's 'Repubblica sociale' of 1943-45. The Author devotes much
attention to Carlo Cantimori because his case is a typical illustration
of the relationship which existed between the Mazzini-inspired tradition
and a certain kind of Fascism. One must bear in mind that the Mazzini
tradition was not confined to the Partito repubblicano and organizations
connected to it, but covered a rather wider ideological spectrum, much
vaguer and politically undefined; and that 'Fascism' refers not so much
to nationalism, traditionalism or Catholicism, but rather to the intellectual
rebellion of the 1910s, to Sorel-inspired syndicalism, revolutionary interventionism
and some aspects of the wave of enthusiasm for the First World War, to
D'Annunzio's movement for Fiume, the youth movements inspired by Gentile's
attualismo in immediate post-war years and the urge to get rid of 'Old
Italy'.
This was the background to Cantimori's upbringing. For the young student
at the 'liceo' his first impact with Giovanni Gentile's thought consisted
of Gentile's interpretation of Mazzini, and the school reform which Gentile
carried out as Minister of Education in the Mussolini government. In 1924,
when he went to the Scuola Normale Superiore, Cantimori was able to study
in greater detail the more strictly philosophical aspects of Gentile's
thought. There has been much discussion of Cantimori's 'attualismo', and
there have been attempts to prove and emphasize an early crisis of this
'attualismo'. The Author shares with other scholars the view according
to which there was a 'sustained loyalty' to Gentile's thought, and Cantimori
derived many historical topics from Gentile, both in the field of the
studies of heresy and on concepts such as 'culture' and the 'history of
culture'. Loyalty does not imply slavish repetition. Cantimori always
tried to reformulate in an independent manner the categories of Gentile's
Idealist Historicism, often applying them to new problems emerging both
from historical research and from political reality, thus taking this
Historicism beyond its hermeneutic limits and simplifications. This goes
as far as the strictly intellectual sphere is concerned. As far as academic
life and publishing life go, Paolo Simoncelli's recent studies have stressed
the full participation of Cantimori in Gentile's cultural policy right
up to Mussolini's fall from power in 1943.
Cantimori's Fascism emerged at an earlier stage of life than was the
case for his father. Already in 1924, in the months following the assassination
of the Social Democrat MP, Giacomo Matteotti, he thought of joining the
National Fascist Party (PNF, Partito Nazionale Fascista), as he eventually
did in 1926. In his detached attitude towards the Matteotti affair one
can find in Cantimori (as in Gentile himself) that combination of voluntaristic
Idealism and political realism, revolutionism and 'Machiavellism' which
will always be typical of his mental framework. Fascism was for him a
'religion', a 'totalitarian' vision of life, which would make possible
a more general religious reform of Italian society, eliminating the historical
defects of Italian national character, to complete that plan of «making
Italians» (after the making of Italy) which had been set as an objective
from the Risorgimento to the time of Liberal Italy, and which had miserably
failed. The masses had been excluded from the Risorgimento movements,
and then led (and ultimately misled) into the political arena by the Socialists.
They could now proceed in their upward march, to become a nation and thus
identify with the state. All these motifs are typical of Gentile's thought.
The young Cantimori added a greater degree of attention to the general
European situation, to the topics of the European crisis and decline,
in which he felt that Fascism could offer a solution. Already in 1929,
in some of the writings which had remained unknown and which are published
in the Appendix to this essay, the young scholar reveals himself as a
supporter of Fascist 'Europeanism' which will develop along its own lines
up to the end of the Fascist regime. It was a 'Europeanism' which was
radically opposed to the liberal democratic version; it did not abandon
any ambitions to a continental hegemony and an imperial perspective, but
considered it still necessary to move in the existing international framework,
such as that represented by the League of Nations. The young Cantimori
also added to these interests a special attention to social issues (which
came from the 'subversivism' of his background). This emerged especially
after 1929, in the 'second phase' of Cantimori's Fascism.
The turning point is represented by the Lateran Treaty, the reconciliation
between the Catholic Church and the Italian state, signed on 11 February
1929. The Apostolic Roman Catholic confession was reasserted as the religion
of the Fascist state and the old Nationalist, Catholic and antimodernist
tendencies of Fascism were greatly strengthened by the new situation.
How could Fascism be the basis of a new 'religious reformation', when
it was running the risk of being hegemonized by traditionally reactionary
forces, hostile to all the history of the Italian Risorgimento? It was
precisely against the influence of these forces on the culture and the
national character of Italians that the reform should have been carried
out. As many other followers of Gentile, Cantimori reacted to the political
and cultural disarray which followed the 'Concordato' by redefining his
Fascism in two directions. On the one hand he challenged more forcefully
all reactionary and nationalist catholic interpretations of Fascism. On
the other he stressed its social aspect, i.e. the Corporatist doctrine.
For Cantimori and and many young Italian intellectuals, Corporatism represented
for many years a third way, distinct from Western capitalism and Bolshevik
statism, the revolutionary solution proposed by Fascism to the crisis
of European society, which was also aggravated by the consequences of
the Great Depression of 1929. For those who took seriously this revolutionary
solution (together with its roots in the Italian Risorgimento, that is
to say in a revolution with its own social and religious agenda) Fascism
could not be assimilated to the various reactionary movements which were
present all over Europe. Fascism was to be the banner of «European
revolution, not reaction». In a similar manner Cantimori – once
again following in Gentile's footsteps – marked a sharp division between
authentic Fascism and the men and the ideological baggage which was brought
over to Fascism by the old Nationalist movement, its political Catholicism,
its ideological traditionalism, its social authoritarianism. He was firmly
opposed to the «revanche over the Risorgimento», which many
of the Nationalists coveted in the wake of the 'Concordato'.
On the basis of this interpretation of Fascism, which was shared by a
significant number of young Italians and by some political and intellectual
milieus, such as Critica fascista (a review run by Giuseppe Bottai,
minister of the Corporations between 1929 and 1932) and by the Nuovi
studi di diritto, economia e politica, a series edited by two pupils
of Gentile, Ugo Spirito and Arnaldo Volpicelli. Cantimori took part in
their publishing activities until1935 , dealing with new political movements
in Europe, and especially Bolshevism and National Socialism. Cantimori
inherited from the political milieu in which he was brought up an overall
anti-bourgeois attitude, which found expression in his kind of Fascism.
He was therefore extremely interested in the Soviet experience, avoiding
any anti-Communist preconception, both with reference to planning and
the human and economic costs it involved, and to the restrictions on freedom
and the regimentation of cultural life existing in Stalin's Russia. In
Cantimori's eyes, the rationalization of social life which was carried
out by 'enlightened' minorities seemed preferable to the 'anarchy' of
the market, which he considered essentially immoral. This is why he often
wrote that Fascism should not be conceived as anti-Communism, as a bulwark
of European reaction. For Cantimori, the relation between Italian Fascism
and Bolshevism was not one of opposition, but of competition. In 1931
he wrote that these were «two new movements, which are fighting
among each other in different ways for the conquest of an old world»,
not an old movement (Fascism) opposed to a new one (Communism).
Cantimori's relationship with the German intellectual milieu and with
National Socialism was much more complex. This essay does not rediscuss
his studies on German culture (Schmitt, Jünger, Moeller van der Bruck),
which have been discussed at length by other authors. It prefers, instead,
to focus on the political judgement of National Socialism, which Cantimori
expressed as an Italian Fascist between 1933 and 1935, in the context
of the judgement expressed by the Fascist milieu to which he was connected.
Cantimori had been following since the mid-Twenties that political and
cultural constellation which goes under the name of «konservative
Revolution», and in 1927-28 he had portrayed sympathetically their
positions. In the following years Cantimori often criticized the 'political
Romanticism' which he sees lurking in many aspects of German political
culture, stressing its reactionary aspects, as opposed to the revolutionary
nature of Fascist Corporatism. In March 1933 he dealt for the first time
with National Socialism, and he judged it negatively from a political
point of view, as a «confused and dark movement, spiritual heir
to pre-war racist pan-German movement and to Romantic statism».
He stressed the ideological distances which separates it from Fascism,
while praising the social Left of the Strasser brothers and being attentive
to the anticapitalist National Socialist milieus, to Nationalbolschewismus,
which he knew well, and which were destined to lose in the political infighting
of the NSDAP. In Cantimori's 1933 short review we find all the basic themes
of his attitude towards National Socialism. This essay follows in detail
the evolution of this judgement in the following years and the role which
Cantimori played in the reception of Carl Schmitt's thought in Italy.
Despite the fact that Cantimori noticed profound differences between
revolutionary Fascism and National Socialism, he nevertheless shows no
sympathy for the Weimar Republic, or its parties, for its culture. This
is one of the many symptoms of another constant aspect of Cantimori's
thought: his hostility towards parliamentary institutions, democratic
systems, liberal values as a whole. For Cantimori and for many other members
of his generation, liberalism belonged to Stefan Zweig's «World
of Yesterday». The present work examines in this perspective Cantimori's
relationship to Croce, the greatest 'legal' opponent of the Fascist regime.
In those years Croce was reflecting on the eclipse of liberalism and the
triumph of totalitarianism. A wide gulf separated the young historian
from the moral world of Croce. Cantimori expressed highly critical judgements
on Alain, Ortega y Gasset, Huizinga, Thomas Mann and many other figures
of European liberal and Christian culture. This study attempts to address
the difficult issue concerning the relationship between Cantimori's political
choices in these years and his field of research, i.e. the history of
Italian heretics of the Sixteenth-century, forerunners of religious freedom.
Cantimori's studies on this topic up to 1939 are discussed.
Cantimori's confidence in Fascism begins to waver in 1934-35 and it vanishes
in the years 1935 through 1938, when the actual policy of Mussolini's
regime leads many supporters of 'Corporatism' see the failure of their
ideals, and its dissolution into its different components (refusal of
reactionary positions and anti-Communism, opposition to National Socialism,
anti-racism, immanent and non-confessional ethics). This is the point
at which begins the political diaspora of many intellectuals who had believed
in Corporatism and the revolutionary nature of Fascism. Cantimori realized
the mystification involved in many of his earlier positions, but did not
accept a merely critical or agnostic position towards Fascism, nor did
he return to ideological positions, such as liberalism, which he considered
relics of the past. Communism – which he embraced after 1938 – seemed
to him a new 'system of truth', which was not exposed to dark irrational
tendencies, and which satisfied, in a historically visible form, many
of the aspirations which he had thought Fascism could have fulfilled.
This was a complex intellectual evolution, which this essay investigates
on the basis of the fragmentary evidence now available and through his
political writings, considered in all their cautiousness and hesitancy.
Cantimori's political choice remained undetected by most of his contemporaries,
and it did not lead to political activism or underground activities. He
continued to operate in the cultural institutions of the regime, and at
the end of 1940 he began teaching at the Scuola Normale in Pisa, in close
contact with Gentile. Nevertheless, in 1941-42 he established contact
with Giulio Einaudi, the heterodox publisher in Turin. The changes affected
more his cultural attitudes: around 1940 he began a study of Marxism,
which was to continue until the end of the 1940s. In the field of historical
research he devoted himself to the analysis of some Italian social reformers
in the period between the French Revolution and 1848.
Index
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