Very Deeply Dyed in Black: Sir Oswald Mosley and the Resurrection of British Fascism After 1945

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Bloomsbury Academic, 2007 - 205 ページ

When Oswald Mosley was interned in 1940, how could his followers keep the 'sacred flame' of British fascism alight? Did his arrest kill the movement stone-dead? This meticulous examination of sources including party records, the press, the National Archive and survivors' accounts shows that the Mosley magic - an almost religious experience to his followers - survived, and he was near-canonised by them.In 1948 Mosley formed a new party - the Union Movement (UM) - and the old British-first fascism of the British Union of Fascists gave way to a European fascist super-state, 'Europe-a-Nation', a pan-European fascist force aligned against Russia and America. This 'nation' was based on spiritual and racial values drawn from Mosley's reading of European history, and nurtured by a vast white-ruled colonial empire. But the sacred flame of the new fascism, defined and explained in Mosley's magnum opus, "The Alternative", did not survive in that form.
As Very "Deeply Dyed in Black" reveals, Mosley's organisation served as an essential antechamber to later organisations, including the British National Party, which expounded a reversion to British-first opposition to Commonwealth immigration and the rewriting of history, including holocaust denial.In this study of Mosley as leader and individual, Macklin brilliantly demonstrates how Britain's home-grown fascist icon remained a committed, unrepentant fascist and anti-Semite until his final days.

著者について (2007)

Graham Macklin is a Visiting Honorary Fellow at the Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/Non-Jewish relations, University of Southampton. He received his PhD from the University of Sheffield in 2002 before taking up a position at The National Archives, Kew, London. He has written widely on the subject of British fascism in a number of publications including the BBC History Magazine.

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