Umberto Eco : A Practical List for Identifying Fascists
Fascism is present even in the most progressive democracies, some points for identifying its component parts.
The word “Fascist” is used with great ease and lightness in our own time. It’s applied as a kind of “cult insult.” Someone or something is Fascist when trying to impose arbitrary laws or rules on others. In recent history, Fascism was a mystical ideology and political movement, one founded by Benito Mussolini in Italy during the period between the two world wars.
By extension, the word has been used to refer to Nazism and other totalitarian movements.
What do contemporary “Fascisms” have in common with the historical ones ?
The question was taken up by the recently deceased Italian novelist and semiotician, Umberto Eco, who plunged into the word “Fascist” to clarify some of its implications.
“The Fascist game can be played in many ways, and the name of the game doesn’t change.”
In an essay published in the New York Review of Books, Eco distilled the 14 typical elements of “Ur-Fascism or Eternal Fascism,” while warning that, “These features cannot be organized into a system; many of them contradict each other and are also typical of other kinds of despotism or fanaticism. But it is enough that one of them be present to allow fascism to coagulate around it.”
In reviewing these points, it’s difficult not to think of current “television dictators,” in which politicians exercise a selective populism instigated by xenophobia, and in which the same political class is chosen from an elite of charismatic and photogenic people.
This is presented without any preparation in critical thinking nor in the art of governance.
Finally, Umberto Eco's analysis of eternal fascism holds up a disturbing mirror to our contemporary society. His 14 features of fascism are not simply relics of a bygone era, but alarm bells still ringing.
In a world where political and social tensions are rising, populist rhetoric is gaining ground, and misinformation is spreading at lightning speed, Eco's observations are particularly acute.
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They call for heightened vigilance, not only towards our leaders, but also towards ourselves and our own prejudices.
But awareness is not enough. It must be accompanied by thoughtful action and constant civic commitment. It's up to each and every one of us to preserve and strengthen the foundations of our democracy.
Fortunately, the rise of any new form of totalitarian power has always arrived accompanied by renewed forms of resistance, and in which difference and collaboration predominate (in place of indifference and collaboration-ism).
To take this critical reflection a step further, readers can turn to Noam Chomsky's "Propaganda and Democracy".
This book - like all Chomsky's books, by the way - sheds further light on the subtle mechanisms of public opinion control in modern democratic societies. It deepens our understanding of the issues raised by Eco, exploring how certain forms of manipulation can coexist with democratic institutions.
As we navigate troubled political seas, marked by the rise of extremes and increasing polarization, the analytical tools provided by Eco and Chomsky prove more valuable than ever. They remind us that democracy is not a given, but a fragile ideal that requires constant, informed defense.
Ultimately, it's up to us citizens to remain vigilant, to cultivate our critical spirit, and to engage actively in public debate.
As Umberto Eco so rightly said: "We have to be careful not to forget that eternal fascism is still all around us, sometimes in civilian clothes. It would be so much more comfortable to be able to identify our enemies in their uniforms and black clothes. But alas, life isn't that simple."
Be alert. Be proactive. Do not let History be repeated.