Community of Writers Podcasts

Bibliocracy Episode 13: Federico Finchelstein on Wannabe Fascists

June 05, 2024 Community of Writers Season 1 Episode 13
Bibliocracy Episode 13: Federico Finchelstein on Wannabe Fascists
Community of Writers Podcasts
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Community of Writers Podcasts
Bibliocracy Episode 13: Federico Finchelstein on Wannabe Fascists
Jun 05, 2024 Season 1 Episode 13
Community of Writers

My guest this week is a world-renowned expert on fascism, populism, and dictatorship.  Federico Finchelstein’s newest book is The Wannabe Fascists: A Guide to Understanding the Greatest Threat to Democracy.  He makes important distinctions even while educating, contextualizing, and warning, once again, of fascism’s rise globally and explaining its antecedents.   Finchelstein carefully considers what false or “wannabe fascism” is in the context of populism, Trump, dictatorship, all revisited, defined, and redefined toward apprehending the difference between movements, strategies and singular leaders.  The book is a history, a thesaurus, a field guide, an encyclopedic review and, yes, delivers a not entirely unexpected if important argument.  Federico Finchelstein teaches history at the New School for Social Reseearch and Eugene Lang College in New York City. His previous books include From Fascism to Populism in History and A Brief History of Fascist Lies.  


Show Notes

My guest this week is a world-renowned expert on fascism, populism, and dictatorship.  Federico Finchelstein’s newest book is The Wannabe Fascists: A Guide to Understanding the Greatest Threat to Democracy.  He makes important distinctions even while educating, contextualizing, and warning, once again, of fascism’s rise globally and explaining its antecedents.   Finchelstein carefully considers what false or “wannabe fascism” is in the context of populism, Trump, dictatorship, all revisited, defined, and redefined toward apprehending the difference between movements, strategies and singular leaders.  The book is a history, a thesaurus, a field guide, an encyclopedic review and, yes, delivers a not entirely unexpected if important argument.  Federico Finchelstein teaches history at the New School for Social Reseearch and Eugene Lang College in New York City. His previous books include From Fascism to Populism in History and A Brief History of Fascist Lies.