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{{Short description|Term}}
[[File:Vinnycia01.JPG|thumb|Soviet Communism portrayed in a Nazi German propaganda poster (1943)]]
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'''Red fascism''' is a [[pejorative]] term used to describe [[Stalinism]] as being similar to [[fascism]]. Accusations that the leaders of the [[Soviet Union]] during the Stalinist period acted as "Red Fascists" were commonly stated by [[Trotskyism|Trotskyists]], [[Left communism|left communists]], [[Social Democracy|social democrats]], [[Democratic Socialism|democratic socialists]] and [[Anarchism|anarchists]], as well as among [[right-wing politics|right wing]] circles.
'''Red fascism''' is a term equating [[Stalinism]] and other variants of [[Marxism–Leninism]] with [[fascism]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Maddux|first=Tomas R.|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1540-6563.1977.tb01210.x?journalCode=rhis20|title=Red Fascism, Brown Bolshevism: The American Image of Tolatitarianinsm in the 1930s|journal=The Historian|publisher=Informa UK Limited|volume=40|issue=1|date=1 November 1977|issn=0018-2370|doi=10.1111/j.1540-6563.1977.tb01210.x|pages=85–103|access-date=9 January 2020}}</ref>{{sfn|Adler|Paterson|1970|p=1046}} Accusations that the leaders of the [[Soviet Union]] during the [[History of the Soviet Union (1927–1953)|Stalin era]] acted as "red fascists" have come from [[Left-wing politics|left-wing]] figures who identified as [[Anarchism|anarchists]], [[Left communism|left communists]], [[Social democracy|social democrats]] and other [[Democratic socialism|democratic socialists]], as well as [[Liberalism|liberals]], and among [[Right-wing politics|right-wing]] circles both [[Centre-right politics|closer to]] and [[Far-right politics|further from]] the [[Centrism|centre]]. The [[comparison of Nazism and Stalinism]] is controversial in academia.


In the early 20th century, the original Italian Fascists initially claimed to be neither left-wing nor right-wing, but in 1921 they [[Fascism and ideology#World War I and aftermath (1914–1922)|began to identify themselves]] as the "extreme right", and their founder Benito Mussolini explicitly [[Fascism and ideology#Fascism's relationship with other political and economic ideologies|affirmed]] that fascism is opposed to socialism and other left-wing ideologies.
In the first half of the 20th century, a number of socialists in America began to hold the view that the Soviet government was transforming into a species of Red fascism. One such leader, Norman Thomas, who ran for U.S. President numerous times under the [[Socialist Party of America]] banner, accused the Soviet Union in the 1940s of decaying into Red fascism, writing “Such is the logic of totalitarianism," that “communism, whatever it was originally, is today Red fascism.”<ref>Norman Thomas, “Which Way America—Fascism, Communism, Socialism or Democracy?” ''Town Meeting Bulletin'', XIII (March 16, 1948), pp. 19-20</ref><ref>Les K. Adler and Thomas G. Paterson “Red Fascism: The Merger of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia in the American Image of Totalitarianism, 1930's–1950's,” ''The American Historical Review'', (April 1, 1970) 75 (4): p. 1046, footnote 4</ref> [[Bruno Rizzi]], an Italian Marxist and a founder of the Communist Party of Italy, claimed as early as 1938 that “Stalinism [took on] a regressive course, generating a species of red fascism identical in its superstructural and choreographic features [with its Fascist model]".<ref>A. James Gregor, ''The Fascist Persuasion in Radical Politics'', Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 1974, p. 193</ref>


==Use of the term==
Many leftists in the 1930s and 40s became disillusioned and estranged by the Soviet Union, and condemned it for its rigid authoritarianism. [[Otto Rühle]], a German [[Left communism|left communist]], wrote that "the struggle against fascism must begin with the struggle against bolshevism," noting the possible influence the [[Leninism|Leninist]] state had on fascist states by serving as a model. Otto Rühle further professed in 1939 that “Russia was the example for fascism... Whether party ‘communists’ like it or not, the fact remains that the state order and rule in Russia are indistinguishable from those in Italy and Germany. Essentially they are alike. One may speak of a red, black, or brown ‘soviet state’, as well as of red, black or brown fascism.”<ref>Otto Rühle, “The Struggle Against Fascism Begins with the Struggle Against Bolshevism,” the American Councillist journal ''Living Marxism'', (1939) Vol. 4, No. 8</ref>
===By the anti-Stalinist left, mid-20th century===
Use of the term "red fascist" was first recorded in the early 1920s, in the aftermath of both the [[Russian Revolution]] and the [[March on Rome]], for instance by [[Italians|Italian]] [[Anarchism|anarchist]] [[Luigi Fabbri]] who wrote in 1922 that "red fascists" is the name that has recently been given to those Bolshevik communists who are most inclined to espouse fascism's methods for use against their adversaries.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Preventive Counter-revolution|last=Fabbri |first=Luigi|author-link=Luigi Fabbri|year=1922|url=https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/8pk1j9|publisher=[[Kate Sharpley Library]]|page=41}}</ref>{{Additional citation needed|date=February 2024}}


In the following years, some socialists began to believe and argue that the Soviet government was becoming a red fascist state. [[Bruno Rizzi]], an Italian [[Marxism|Marxist]] and a founder of the [[Communist Party of Italy]] who became an [[anti-Stalinist left|anti-Stalinist]], claimed in 1938 that "Stalinism [took on] a regressive course, generating a species of red fascism identical in its [[Base and superstructure|superstructural]] and choreographic features [with its Fascist model]."<ref>{{cite book|first=A. James|last=Gregor|title=The Fascist Persuasion in Radical Politics |location=Princeton, New Jersey|publisher=[[Princeton University Press]]|date=1974|page=193}}</ref>
In a September 18, 1939 editorial, ''[[The New York Times]]'' reacted to the signing of the [[Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact]] by declaring that “Hitlerism is brown communism, Stalinism is red fascism.”<ref>“Editorial: The Russian Betrayal”, ''The New York Times'', Sept. 18, 1939</ref> The editorial further opined that “The world will now understand that the only real ‘ideological’ issue is one between democracy, liberty and peace on the one hand and despotism, terror and war on the other.”


While primarily focused on critiquing [[Nazism]], [[Wilhelm Reich]] considered [[Joseph Stalin]]'s Soviet Union to have developed into red fascism.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Corrington|first=Robert S.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51297185|title=Wilhelm Reich: psychoanalyst and radical naturalist|date=2003|publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux|isbn=0-374-25002-2|edition=1st|location=New York|page=126|oclc=51297185}}</ref>
During the period while the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was in force, [[Benito Mussolini]] positively reviewed Stalinism as having transformed Soviet Bolshevism into a Slavic fascism.<ref>MacGregor Knox. Mussolini Unleashed, 1939-1941: Politics and Strategy in Italy's Last War. Pp. 63-64.</ref> Despite ideological differences, [[Adolf Hitler]] admired Stalin and his politics and believed that Stalin was in effect transforming Soviet [[Bolsheviks|Bolshevism]] into a form of National Socialism.<ref>François Furet. ''Passing of an Illusion: The Idea of Communism in the Twentieth Century''. Chicago, Illinois, USA; London, England, UK: University of Chicago Press, 1999. ISBN 0226273407. Pp. 191-192.</ref>


The term is often attributed to [[Franz Borkenau]], a key proponent of the theory of [[totalitarianism]] (which posits that there are certain essential similarities between fascism and Stalinism). Borkenau used the term in 1939.<ref name="Dullin Pickford 2011 pp. 221–243">{{cite journal|last1=Dullin|first1=Sabine|last2=Pickford|first2=Susan|title=How to wage warfare without going to war?. Stalin's 1939 war in the light of other contemporary aggressions|journal=Cahiers du monde russe|issue=2–3|date=2011-11-15|volume=52|issn=1252-6576|pages=221–243|doi=10.4000/monderusse.9331|url=http://journals.openedition.org/monderusse/9331|access-date=2021-08-26|quote=the Austrian historian and sociologist Franz Borkenau, himself a former Communist, published ''The Totalitarian Enemy'' on December 1, 1939 (London, [[Faber & Faber]], 1940), writing the work after the shock of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and the start of the war... For Borkenau, the pact clarified the situation and the parties present brought out the underlying similarities between the German and Russian systems, which he described as “Brown Bolshevism” and “Red Fascism,” thereby increasing the war’s legitimacy in defending freedom.|doi-access=free}}</ref> [[Otto Rühle]] wrote that "the struggle against fascism must begin with the struggle against bolshevism", adding that he believed the Soviets had influence on fascist states by serving as a model. In 1939, Rühle further professed:<blockquote>Russia was the example for fascism. [...] Whether party 'communists' like it or not, the fact remains that the state order and rule in Russia are indistinguishable from those in [[Fascist Italy (1922–1943)|Italy]] and [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]. Essentially they are alike. One may speak of a red, black, or brown 'soviet state', as well as of red, black or brown fascism.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Rühle|first=Otto|author-link=Otto Rühle|title=The Struggle Against Fascism Begins with the Struggle Against Bolshevism|journal=The American Councillist Journal – Living Marxism|date=1939|volume=4|number=8}}</ref><ref name="Memos">{{cite journal|last=Memos|first=C.|date=2012|url=https://www.lwbooks.co.uk/sites/default/files/as20.2_02memos.pdf|title=Anarchism and Council Communism on the Russian Revolution|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201206043309/https://www.lwbooks.co.uk/sites/default/files/as20.2_02memos.pdf|archive-date=2020-12-06|journal=Anarchist Studies|volume=20|number=2}}</ref></blockquote>
However, the [[Soviet Union]] and other socialist countries heavily criticised fascism in their official documents and finally attacked the fascist regimes. Marxist theories of fascism have seen fascism as a form of reaction to socialism and a feature of capitalism.<ref>E.g. Dave Renton. ''Fascism: Theory and Practice''. London: Pluto Press, 1999.</ref> In addition, several modern historians have tried to pay more attention to the economic, political and ideological differences between these two regimes than to their similarities.<ref>E.g. Henry Rousso. "Stalinism and Nazism. History and Memory Compared". ''Historische Zeitschrift''. 286:3, 2008. Pp. 795-796.</ref> Although Michael Geyer and Sheila Fitzpatrick, in ''Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared'' (2009), noted similarities between Stalinism and Nazism, they have also stated that “when it comes to one-on-one comparison, the two societies and regimes may as well have hailed from different worlds.”<ref>Michael Geyer and Sheila Fitzpatrick. ''Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared''. New York, New York, USA: Cambridge University Press, 2009. Pp. 33-37 and 21.</ref>

[[Kurt Schumacher]], who was imprisoned in [[Nazi concentration camps]], but survived WWII to become the first post-war [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] opposition leader in [[West Germany]], described pro-Soviet communists as "red-painted fascists" or "red-lacquered Nazis".<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-10-01|title=Left Fascism|url=https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/real-history-left-fascism|access-date=2021-08-29|website=Tablet Magazine |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Lüthi|first=Lorenz M.|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cold-wars/9A581A5A18BE15169D34FE39D2D962E1|title=Cold Wars: Asia, the Middle East, Europe|date=2020|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|isbn=978-1-108-41833-1|location=Cambridge|page=421|doi=10.1017/9781108289825}}</ref>

Similarly, the exiled Russian anarchist [[Volin]], who saw the Soviet state as totalitarian and as an "example of integral [[state capitalism]]",<ref name="Memos"/> used the term "red fascism" to describe it.<ref name="Avrich 1988 p.132">{{cite book|last=Avrich|first=Paul|title=Anarchist portraits|publisher=[[Princeton University Press]]|publication-place=Princeton, N.J|year=1988|isbn=978-0-691-00609-3|oclc=17727270|language=en|page=132}}</ref>

In the [[United States]], [[Norman Thomas]] (who ran for [[President of the United States|president]] numerous times under the [[Socialist Party of America]] banner), accused the Soviet Union in the 1940s of decaying into red fascism by writing: "Such is the logic of [[totalitarianism]]", that "communism, whatever it was originally, is today red fascism."<ref>{{cite news|first=Norman|last=Thomas|title=Which Way America – Fascism, Communism, Socialism or Democracy?|work=Town Meeting Bulletin|volume=XIII|date=March 16, 1948|pages=19–20}}</ref>{{sfn|Adler|Paterson|1970|p=1046|loc=footnote 4}} In the same period, the term was used by the [[New York Intellectuals]], who were left-wing but sided against the Soviet Union in the developing [[Cold War]].<ref name="Wald 2000 pp. 99–117">{{cite journal|last=Wald|first=Alan|title=Victor Serge and the New York Anti-Stalinist left|journal=Critique|publisher=Informa UK Limited|volume=28|issue=1|year=2000|issn=0301-7605|doi=10.1080/03017600108413449|pages=99–117|s2cid=152152043|quote=the prevailing anti-Stalinism of most of the New York writers overwhelmed their other concerns... they consciously chose to ally with the "West" as the lesser of two evils locked in struggle in the 'Cold War.' The 'West', of course, was their euphemism for imperialism, which had now become an acceptable ally against what they called 'Red Fascism'.}}</ref>

===In the political mainstream in the Cold War===
The term "red fascism" was also used in America during and leading up to the [[Cold War]] as an [[anti-communism|anti-communist]] slogan. In a September 18, 1939, editorial, ''[[The New York Times]]'' reacted to the signing of the [[Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact]] by declaring that "Hitlerism is brown communism, Stalinism is red fascism."<ref name="nyteditorial39">{{cite news|title=Editorial: The Russian Betrayal|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=September 18, 1939}}</ref> The editorial further opined:
<blockquote>The world will now understand that the only real 'ideological' issue is one between democracy, liberty and peace on the one hand and [[despotism]], terror and war on the other.<ref name="nyteditorial39"/></blockquote>
After the war, in 1946, [[J. Edgar Hoover]], the director of the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]], gave a speech in which he said:<blockquote>[[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]], [[Hideki Tojo|Tojo]], and [[Benito Mussolini|Mussolini]] brands of Fascism were met and defeated on the battle fıeld. All those who stand for the American way of life must arise and defeat Red Fascism in America by focusing upon it the spotlight of public opinion and by building up barriers of common decency through which it cannot penetrate.<ref name="Michigan State University Press 2017 p=453">{{cite journal|author=Stephen M. Underhill|title=Prisoner of Context: The Truman Doctrine Speech and J. Edgar Hoover's Rhetorical Realism|journal=Rhetoric and Public Affairs|publisher=[[Michigan State University Press]]|volume=20|issue=3|year=2017|issn=1094-8392|doi=10.14321/rhetpublaffa.20.3.0453|page=453|s2cid=148824916}}</ref></blockquote> The speech was reprinted in December 1946 in the ''Washington News Digest'', and Hoover also entitled an article “Red Fascism in the United States Today” in ''[[American Magazine]]'' in February 1947.<ref name="Michigan State University Press 2017 p=453"/>

[[Ukrainians|Ukrainian]] writer [[Ivan Bahrianyi]] in [[1946]] in pamphlet ''Why I Am Not Going Back to the Soviet Union'' wrote about the [[Holodomor]], [[Executed Renaissance|repressions of Ukrainian intelligentsia]], Soviet policy of [[Russification]] and conception of the [[Soviet people]]:
{{Text and translation
|Тим терором російський червоний фашизм (більшовизм) намагається перетворити 100 національностей в т.зв. "єдиний радянський народ", цебто фактично в російський народ.<ref>Багряний І. На новий шлях. Чому я не хочу вертатися до СРСР?. – К.: «Українська прес-група», 2012. – 112 с. – (Бібліотека газети «День»; серія «Бронебійна публіцистика»).</ref>
|With this terror, Russian red fascism (Bolshevism) is trying to turn 100 ethnic groups into the so-called "single Soviet people," that is, in fact, the Russian people.}}

[[Jack Tenney]], an anti-communist politician who chaired the [[California Senate Factfinding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities]], published a report entitled ''Red Fascism'' in 1947, which drew on the popular [[anti-fascism]] of the war years to portray the Soviet Union and domestic Communism as similar to the Nazis.<ref name="Geary p=912">{{cite journal|last=Geary|first=Daniel|title=Carey McWilliams and Antifascism, 1934–1943|journal=[[Journal of American History]]|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|volume=90|issue=3|date=2003-12-01|pages=912–934|issn=0021-8723|doi=10.2307/3660881|jstor=3660881|quote=In the postwar period, Tenney's language of 'red fascism,' which identified fascism with the domestic progressive agenda and denounced it as a Communist plot, would supplant McWilliams's equation of fascism with American political repression, class inequalities, and racism. Not only right-wingers such as Tenney but Cold War liberals as well identified fascism with an oppressive totalitarianism common to the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany and absent from the democratic society of the United States.}}</ref> The same year, federal politicians [[United States Senate|Senator]] [[Everett Dirksen]] and [[United States House of Representatives|Representative]] [[Henderson L. Lanham]] also used the term.<ref name="Ivie 1999 pp. 570–591">{{cite journal|last=Ivie|first=Robert L.|title=Fire, Flood, and Red Fever: Motivating Metaphors of Global Emergency in the Truman Doctrine Speech|journal=Presidential Studies Quarterly |publisher=Wiley, Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress|volume=29|issue=3|year=1999|issn=1741-5705|jstor=27552019|pages=570–591|doi=10.1111/j.0268-2141.2003.00050.x|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/27552019|access-date=26 August 2021}}</ref>

===Post–Cold War and contemporary===
[[French people|French]] philosopher and journalist [[Bernard-Henri Lévy]] has used the term in arguing that some [[Europe]]an intellectuals have been infatuated with [[Counter-Enlightenment|anti-Enlightenment]] theories and embraced a new absolutist ideology, one that is [[anti-liberal]], [[Anti-Americanism|anti-American]], [[anti-imperialism|anti-imperialist]], [[New antisemitism|antisemitic]] and pro-[[Islamofascism|Islamofascist]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Sternberg|first=Ernest|title=A Revivified Corpse: Left-Fascism in the Twenty-First Century|work=TELOSscope|date=7 January 2009|url=http://www.telospress.com/a-revivified-corpseleft-fascism-in-the-twenty-first-century/|publisher=TELOS Press|access-date=15 November 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Murphy|first=Paul Austin|title=Red Fascism|journal=New English Review|date=July 2013|url=https://www.newenglishreview.org/Paul_Austin_Murphy/Red_Fascism/|access-date=3 August 2018|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180803015856/www.newenglishreview.org/Paul_Austin_Murphy/Red_Fascism/|archivedate=3 August 2018}}</ref>

==See also==
* [[Definitions of fascism]]
* [[German–Soviet Axis talks]]
* [[Horseshoe theory]]
* [[National Bolshevism]]
* [[Neosocialism]], a 1930s political faction in Belgium and France
* [[Feudal fascism|Revolutionary Feudal-Totalitarianism]]
* [[Red-green-brown alliance]]
* [[Social fascism]]
* [[Comparison of Nazism and Stalinism]]
* [[Tankie]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist}}

==Bibliography==
* {{Cite journal|last1=Adler|first1=Les K.|last2=Paterson|first2=Thomas|date=1 April 1970|title=Red Fascism: The Merger of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia in the American Image of Totalitarlanism, 1930s–1950s|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1852269|journal=[[The American Historical Review]]|volume=75|issue=4|pages=1046–1064|doi=10.2307/1852269|jstor=1852269}}

[[Category:Anti-Stalinist left]]
[[Category:Communist terrorism]]
[[Category:Fascism in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:National Bolshevism]]
[[Category:Stalinism]]
[[Category:Stalinism]]

Latest revision as of 23:33, 9 January 2025

Red fascism is a term equating Stalinism and other variants of Marxism–Leninism with fascism.[1][2] Accusations that the leaders of the Soviet Union during the Stalin era acted as "red fascists" have come from left-wing figures who identified as anarchists, left communists, social democrats and other democratic socialists, as well as liberals, and among right-wing circles both closer to and further from the centre. The comparison of Nazism and Stalinism is controversial in academia.

In the early 20th century, the original Italian Fascists initially claimed to be neither left-wing nor right-wing, but in 1921 they began to identify themselves as the "extreme right", and their founder Benito Mussolini explicitly affirmed that fascism is opposed to socialism and other left-wing ideologies.

Use of the term

[edit]

By the anti-Stalinist left, mid-20th century

[edit]

Use of the term "red fascist" was first recorded in the early 1920s, in the aftermath of both the Russian Revolution and the March on Rome, for instance by Italian anarchist Luigi Fabbri who wrote in 1922 that "red fascists" is the name that has recently been given to those Bolshevik communists who are most inclined to espouse fascism's methods for use against their adversaries.[3][additional citation(s) needed]

In the following years, some socialists began to believe and argue that the Soviet government was becoming a red fascist state. Bruno Rizzi, an Italian Marxist and a founder of the Communist Party of Italy who became an anti-Stalinist, claimed in 1938 that "Stalinism [took on] a regressive course, generating a species of red fascism identical in its superstructural and choreographic features [with its Fascist model]."[4]

While primarily focused on critiquing Nazism, Wilhelm Reich considered Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union to have developed into red fascism.[5]

The term is often attributed to Franz Borkenau, a key proponent of the theory of totalitarianism (which posits that there are certain essential similarities between fascism and Stalinism). Borkenau used the term in 1939.[6] Otto Rühle wrote that "the struggle against fascism must begin with the struggle against bolshevism", adding that he believed the Soviets had influence on fascist states by serving as a model. In 1939, Rühle further professed:

Russia was the example for fascism. [...] Whether party 'communists' like it or not, the fact remains that the state order and rule in Russia are indistinguishable from those in Italy and Germany. Essentially they are alike. One may speak of a red, black, or brown 'soviet state', as well as of red, black or brown fascism.[7][8]

Kurt Schumacher, who was imprisoned in Nazi concentration camps, but survived WWII to become the first post-war SPD opposition leader in West Germany, described pro-Soviet communists as "red-painted fascists" or "red-lacquered Nazis".[9][10]

Similarly, the exiled Russian anarchist Volin, who saw the Soviet state as totalitarian and as an "example of integral state capitalism",[8] used the term "red fascism" to describe it.[11]

In the United States, Norman Thomas (who ran for president numerous times under the Socialist Party of America banner), accused the Soviet Union in the 1940s of decaying into red fascism by writing: "Such is the logic of totalitarianism", that "communism, whatever it was originally, is today red fascism."[12][13] In the same period, the term was used by the New York Intellectuals, who were left-wing but sided against the Soviet Union in the developing Cold War.[14]

In the political mainstream in the Cold War

[edit]

The term "red fascism" was also used in America during and leading up to the Cold War as an anti-communist slogan. In a September 18, 1939, editorial, The New York Times reacted to the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact by declaring that "Hitlerism is brown communism, Stalinism is red fascism."[15] The editorial further opined:

The world will now understand that the only real 'ideological' issue is one between democracy, liberty and peace on the one hand and despotism, terror and war on the other.[15]

After the war, in 1946, J. Edgar Hoover, the director of the FBI, gave a speech in which he said:

Hitler, Tojo, and Mussolini brands of Fascism were met and defeated on the battle fıeld. All those who stand for the American way of life must arise and defeat Red Fascism in America by focusing upon it the spotlight of public opinion and by building up barriers of common decency through which it cannot penetrate.[16]

The speech was reprinted in December 1946 in the Washington News Digest, and Hoover also entitled an article “Red Fascism in the United States Today” in American Magazine in February 1947.[16]

Ukrainian writer Ivan Bahrianyi in 1946 in pamphlet Why I Am Not Going Back to the Soviet Union wrote about the Holodomor, repressions of Ukrainian intelligentsia, Soviet policy of Russification and conception of the Soviet people:

Тим терором російський червоний фашизм (більшовизм) намагається перетворити 100 національностей в т.зв. "єдиний радянський народ", цебто фактично в російський народ.[17]
With this terror, Russian red fascism (Bolshevism) is trying to turn 100 ethnic groups into the so-called "single Soviet people," that is, in fact, the Russian people.

Jack Tenney, an anti-communist politician who chaired the California Senate Factfinding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities, published a report entitled Red Fascism in 1947, which drew on the popular anti-fascism of the war years to portray the Soviet Union and domestic Communism as similar to the Nazis.[18] The same year, federal politicians Senator Everett Dirksen and Representative Henderson L. Lanham also used the term.[19]

Post–Cold War and contemporary

[edit]

French philosopher and journalist Bernard-Henri Lévy has used the term in arguing that some European intellectuals have been infatuated with anti-Enlightenment theories and embraced a new absolutist ideology, one that is anti-liberal, anti-American, anti-imperialist, antisemitic and pro-Islamofascist.[20][21]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Maddux, Tomas R. (1 November 1977). "Red Fascism, Brown Bolshevism: The American Image of Tolatitarianinsm in the 1930s". The Historian. 40 (1). Informa UK Limited: 85–103. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1977.tb01210.x. ISSN 0018-2370. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  2. ^ Adler & Paterson 1970, p. 1046.
  3. ^ Fabbri, Luigi (1922). The Preventive Counter-revolution. Kate Sharpley Library. p. 41.
  4. ^ Gregor, A. James (1974). The Fascist Persuasion in Radical Politics. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 193.
  5. ^ Corrington, Robert S. (2003). Wilhelm Reich: psychoanalyst and radical naturalist (1st ed.). New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 126. ISBN 0-374-25002-2. OCLC 51297185.
  6. ^ Dullin, Sabine; Pickford, Susan (2011-11-15). "How to wage warfare without going to war?. Stalin's 1939 war in the light of other contemporary aggressions". Cahiers du monde russe. 52 (2–3): 221–243. doi:10.4000/monderusse.9331. ISSN 1252-6576. Retrieved 2021-08-26. the Austrian historian and sociologist Franz Borkenau, himself a former Communist, published The Totalitarian Enemy on December 1, 1939 (London, Faber & Faber, 1940), writing the work after the shock of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and the start of the war... For Borkenau, the pact clarified the situation and the parties present brought out the underlying similarities between the German and Russian systems, which he described as "Brown Bolshevism" and "Red Fascism," thereby increasing the war's legitimacy in defending freedom.
  7. ^ Rühle, Otto (1939). "The Struggle Against Fascism Begins with the Struggle Against Bolshevism". The American Councillist Journal – Living Marxism. 4 (8).
  8. ^ a b Memos, C. (2012). "Anarchism and Council Communism on the Russian Revolution" (PDF). Anarchist Studies. 20 (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-12-06.
  9. ^ "Left Fascism". Tablet Magazine. 2020-10-01. Retrieved 2021-08-29.
  10. ^ Lüthi, Lorenz M. (2020). Cold Wars: Asia, the Middle East, Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 421. doi:10.1017/9781108289825. ISBN 978-1-108-41833-1.
  11. ^ Avrich, Paul (1988). Anarchist portraits. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-691-00609-3. OCLC 17727270.
  12. ^ Thomas, Norman (March 16, 1948). "Which Way America – Fascism, Communism, Socialism or Democracy?". Town Meeting Bulletin. Vol. XIII. pp. 19–20.
  13. ^ Adler & Paterson 1970, p. 1046, footnote 4.
  14. ^ Wald, Alan (2000). "Victor Serge and the New York Anti-Stalinist left". Critique. 28 (1). Informa UK Limited: 99–117. doi:10.1080/03017600108413449. ISSN 0301-7605. S2CID 152152043. the prevailing anti-Stalinism of most of the New York writers overwhelmed their other concerns... they consciously chose to ally with the "West" as the lesser of two evils locked in struggle in the 'Cold War.' The 'West', of course, was their euphemism for imperialism, which had now become an acceptable ally against what they called 'Red Fascism'.
  15. ^ a b "Editorial: The Russian Betrayal". The New York Times. September 18, 1939.
  16. ^ a b Stephen M. Underhill (2017). "Prisoner of Context: The Truman Doctrine Speech and J. Edgar Hoover's Rhetorical Realism". Rhetoric and Public Affairs. 20 (3). Michigan State University Press: 453. doi:10.14321/rhetpublaffa.20.3.0453. ISSN 1094-8392. S2CID 148824916.
  17. ^ Багряний І. На новий шлях. Чому я не хочу вертатися до СРСР?. – К.: «Українська прес-група», 2012. – 112 с. – (Бібліотека газети «День»; серія «Бронебійна публіцистика»).
  18. ^ Geary, Daniel (2003-12-01). "Carey McWilliams and Antifascism, 1934–1943". Journal of American History. 90 (3). Oxford University Press: 912–934. doi:10.2307/3660881. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 3660881. In the postwar period, Tenney's language of 'red fascism,' which identified fascism with the domestic progressive agenda and denounced it as a Communist plot, would supplant McWilliams's equation of fascism with American political repression, class inequalities, and racism. Not only right-wingers such as Tenney but Cold War liberals as well identified fascism with an oppressive totalitarianism common to the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany and absent from the democratic society of the United States.
  19. ^ Ivie, Robert L. (1999). "Fire, Flood, and Red Fever: Motivating Metaphors of Global Emergency in the Truman Doctrine Speech". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 29 (3). Wiley, Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress: 570–591. doi:10.1111/j.0268-2141.2003.00050.x. ISSN 1741-5705. JSTOR 27552019. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  20. ^ Sternberg, Ernest (7 January 2009). "A Revivified Corpse: Left-Fascism in the Twenty-First Century". TELOSscope. TELOS Press. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  21. ^ Murphy, Paul Austin (July 2013). "Red Fascism". New English Review. Archived from the original on 3 August 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2018.

Bibliography

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