Abstract

If fascism or nazism are events proper to the Twentieth Century, certain of their components existed before the rise of the two totalitarianisms. One way to study fascist ideology - which is at once revolutionary and counter revolutionary, archaic and modern - consists of comparing the melancoly of nineteenth-century counter-revolutionary thought with the revolt of the conservative revolution. The intimacy between Joseph de Maistre et Carl Schmitt shows the way in which certain antidemocratic principles, such as the rejection of popular sovereignty, can develop

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