American Fascism: Then and Now
TALKING POLITICS
Catherine Carr
4.7 • 2.5K Ratings
🗓️ 18 June 2020
⏱️ 47 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
David and Helen talk with historian Sarah Churchwell about the origins, uses and abuses of the idea of American fascism. Where does American fascism come from? Does it follow a European model or is it something exceptional? What role do white supremacy and anti-Semitism play in its development? How close has it got to power? Plus we ask the big question for now: Does it make sense to call Trump a fascist?
Talking Points:
Trump’s decision to hold a rally in Tulsa on 19 June is an act of clear provocation to African Americans, especially at this moment.
- 19 June 1865 was the day the last slaves were emancipated, two years after the Emancipation Proclamation.
- The symbolic deferral, the fact that white people were actively denying black people full rights and citizenship, is what Juneteenth came to represent.
- Tulsa is where the worst race riot in American history occurred in 1921. The white population of Tulsa descended on a thriving black community.
- The Trump campaign was forced to move the rally a day. It will happen on 20 June.
Is fascism the right word for what has happened—and is happening in America?
- The second Klan rose between 1915 and 1922.
- The commentariat at the time pointed to Mussolini and fascism to explain the Klan’s resurgence.
- Hitler looked at the US and took aspects, including the legal institutionalisation of white supremacy, especially in the South, as an inspiration.
- But there is something quite specific about European fascism in the 1920s that has to do with the fallout of the First World War.
Fascism is ultra-nationalism. It has to be different in every country: it’s highly situational, highly historicized.
- It can be hard to pin down because each iteration takes its own form.
- Is it historically accurate to call the present moment fascist? Is it useful?
- Is calling Trump a fascist too comforting? Does it keep us from seeing the reasons why he won?
- Is it useful to think about American nativist, conspiratorial, racist, xenophobic, anti-semitic gorups as being recognizably fascist going back in time?
Mentioned in this Episode:
- Sarah and TP American Histories on the 15th and the 19th amendment
- Robert Paxton, The Anatomy of Fascism
- Philip Roth, The Plot Against America
- Sinclair Lewis, It Can’t Happen Here
- Jonathan Shanin on Tom Cotton’s op ed
Further Learning:
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello, my name is David Ronsman and this is Talking Politics. Today Helen and I are |
| 0:14.0 | talking with the historian Sarah Churchill about the meaning of American fascism. Then and now. |
| 0:23.1 | Talking Politics is brought to you in partnership with the London Review of Books, |
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| 1:13.8 | Hi Sarah. Good morning. And Helen. I? |
| 1:16.8 | Sarah, you should probably tell us where you are because we always try and check it on that. |
| 1:20.7 | Yeah, absolutely. I am in London and we're still in lockdown. |
| 1:24.9 | But a different way of London. Helen. So Sarah, we're going to get into the history of this and the |
| 1:31.7 | word fascism is being used a lot at the moment. And there is a question about really what it means in |
| 1:37.5 | the American context. But to connect the past to the present because the past is never passed, |
| 1:43.6 | we're coming up this weekend to a couple of anniversaries and also a big political event, |
| 1:49.0 | which is the rally that Donald Trump, the re-election rally, he's holding in Tulsa. |
| 1:54.6 | He's had to shift the day to avoid one clash, but it's still happening in Tulsa. |
| 2:00.0 | Just give us the framing of that. So we're talking about Juneteenth and we're talking about |
| 2:04.5 | what Tulsa means in the context of this kind of history. |
| 2:09.6 | Well, and what it means in the context of the killing of George Floyd. And of course, |
| 2:13.3 | we're talking as the protests, the Black Lives Matter protests are going on around the world |
... |
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