The Great Illusion: blueprints of collaboration between revolutions in Italy and Germany (1848)

Modern Italy ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Stefano Lissi

Abstract In April 1848, a proclamation of friendship to the Germans sent by the Provisional Government of Milan to the Fünfzigerausschuss (Committee of Fifty) in Frankfurt was rejected by the latter, creating widespread outrage in Italy. Concurrently, a parallel controversy over the possession of South Tyrol arose between the two revolutions. This article provides an exploratory analysis of these two episodes, examining the role they played in shaping relations between the two revolutions, and in influencing the image Italians had of the revolution in Germany. Shedding light on an episode until now overlooked by historiography, this article seeks to contribute to the salient debate on the peculiar relationship between internationalist ideals and nationalist claims during the 1848 revolution. It argues that the disillusioning impact on revolutionary audiences of specific ‘episodes of friction’, such as those examined in this article,was greater than the ‘natural convergence of goals’ of the various national revolutions in 1848.

2012 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 385-396
Author(s):  
Oliver Logan

The successful and highly authoritative Jesuit opinion-journal La Civiltà Cattolica was founded in 1850 to assert Catholic values in the face of ‘the Revolution’, an allegedly nefarious process that had begun with the Revolution of 1789 and was seen by the Jesuit writers as continuing with the 1848 revolution in Italy and the ongoing Risorgimento movement; this called the temporal power of the papacy into question and also entailed wider issues of secularization. For these writers, the periodical press was a dangerous new force and the only way to combat it effectively was on its own ground. The serial novels which ran in the fortnightly journal from 1850 until 1927 were evidendy written in the belief that the devil should not be left with all the most gripping yarns. The dangers to morality posed by romantic novels were constantly emphasized in the journal’s own fiction. The dominant tone of this fiction was polemical. The villains represented the forces of Jacobinism, the secret societies of the early Risorgimento, and Freemasonry. Conspiracy was a constant theme. Indeed, the leitmotifs of anti-Jesuit polemic depicting the Society of Jesus as an occult conspiratorial organization were in turn deployed by the Jesuit writers against Freemasonry. In the present study, however, the emphasis will be primarily on what the works of Antonio Bresciani (1798–1862), the pioneer Jesuit novelist between 1850 and 1861, had to say about Christian life and values. This, in fact, has most relevance to the genre of the romantic novel.


Author(s):  
Jay Bergman

Chapter 13 describes the lessons Marx and Engels, as well as contemporaneous Russian revolutionaries such as Herzen, Kropotkin, and Bakunin, drew from the failure of the Revolution of 1848 in France. Among the Bolsheviks, some ascribed it exclusively to the treachery of the bourgeoisie, which aligned with the proletariat when the revolution began in February, only to betray it in the June Days, using military force to end whatever political power the proletariat still possessed. Ignored after 1917 in the Bolshevik fêtes and other commemorations intended to mythologize the October Revolution, the 1848 Revolution was especially disheartening because, unlike earlier French revolutions, in which the proletariat was either non-existent or too small to have any appreciable effect, in 1848 it actually held power, however briefly. Nevertheless, the Bolsheviks considered the Revolution of 1848 in France worthy of inclusion in the country’s revolutionary tradition.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brendan Rittenhouse Green
Keyword(s):  

1974 ◽  
Vol 19 (7) ◽  
pp. 513-515
Author(s):  
JOHN S. HARDING
Keyword(s):  

1990 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 750-752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Hochberg
Keyword(s):  

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