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In the Axis War on the side of Germany, Mussolini's Italy was responsible for serious war crimes, especially in Yugoslavia and Greece. This 'dark side' of the fascist war, however, is not present in the national memory built after 1945. To distinguish Italy from the former German ally and avoid a punitive peace, the monarchist and anti-fascist ruling classes elaborated a master narrative that highlighted the opposition of the Italian people to Mussolini's war and the humanitarian behavior of Italian soldiers, depicted as saviors of Jews. All responsibility for the crimes committed in the Axis war was placed on the shoulders of the Germans, who thus became a convenient alibi for the national conscience.
Filippo Focardi is a Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Padua
Introduction1 Italy and the Axis in Allied propaganda 2 Who betrayed their country? 3 The origins of war memory4 ‘Italy won too’: atonement and redemption of a ‘nation underground’5 Forgetting the Axis6 ‘Good Italians’ and ‘bad Germans’ 7 Humans or Germans?ConclusionIndex
'Focardi offers a compelling, well-researched examination of how the ‘good Italian’ myth was constructed, sustained, and incorporated into Italy's national identity... I can wholeheartedly recommend this book.'Alessandro Salvador, Modern Italy