Preview

Red Brigade, Italian Terrorism

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
914 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Red Brigade, Italian Terrorism
Red Brigade, Good Morning, Night,

The Red Brigade emerged in 1968 in Italy, a time of social and political turbulence around the world. For the Red Brigades, their fight with the Italian state was the continuation of the fight that the Italian Left Wing Resistance waged against Nazi Fascism during the Second World War. Offspring of classic Marxist/Leninists, their fight was ideological, and they feared the resurgence of Fascism in Italy which they equated with the rise of Italian and European capitalism and its aging corporate leadership. Although they saw themselves as continuing the battle waged by their ancestor resistant fighters, to me, they seemed less interested in obtaining benefits for the workers they claimed to support, than in denouncing capitalism and demagoging their rigid view of a pure Marxism.

The Red Brigade sought to create and deliver propaganda that would prepare students, workers, the proletariat, and masses for “violent and systematic opposition to the bourgeois order.” (Christian Science Monitor, 1978). While the revolutionary predecessors of the Red Brigades, fought Nazism and Fascism to free Italy and Italians, Bellochio’ s movie Good Morning, Night presents a much starker and menacing Red Brigade that in 1968 lost its way as it lost its humanity according to Bellochio. Bellochio says that while ideas are fundamental to a democracy and that political debate and demonstration a virtue, the killing of a human being in the name of one’s ideals is lunacy, and reflects a lack of understanding of life, human reality, and of contemporary Italy. According to Bellochio the Red Brigades failure was the failure to recognize the complex choices in 1968 Italy, and their inability to change along with a changing Italy.

The Red Brigade were ideologues, uncompromising in their world view of a pure class struggle, and they were committed to undermine any other political view in Italy. Their uncompromising view was effective in attracting young,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    DBQ 2010 APWH-CK

    • 1744 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Then, following the example of the students in Beijing, we formed an 'Organization of Red Guards'. Everybody wanted to join the Red Guards because nobody wanted to be 'unqualified', 'backward' and 'non-revolutionary'. I was one of the first to join because, being from a poor peasant's family, my background was supposed to be 'clear'. We all enjoyed having no classes and degrading the teachers. 'The teacher takes the student as the enemy and uses examinations as weapons to attack the student' - the fact that it was Chairman Mao who had said this meant a great deal.…

    • 1744 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    : "Don Lazaro, you've got five boys in Comitan teaching the campesinos how to read. That's subversive. That's communist. So tonight, you have to kill them." Don Lazaro, the mayor of the war torn village, San Martin Comitan, seems to have no choice but to carry out this heartless command. His response is indicative of a desperate man searching for answers, yet already resigned to carrying out the task at hand. "What can I say? --you tell me!" cries an anguished Don Lazaro to the villagers. Is he pleading for their understanding, or asking for a miraculous solution that would alter the path that lay before him? It is this uncertainty that, when coupled with melancholy foreshadowing, leaves the reader at a suspenseful crossroad; suspecting that events are transpiring, but doubtful as to the outcome.…

    • 1097 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Rerere

    • 545 Words
    • 3 Pages

    were "lured by the wages, a feeling of comradeship, and the striking uniforms," to join…

    • 545 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    PropagandaItaliaFC. (2012). Benito Mussolini - Speech (26.03.1939 Rome) (English subtitle). [Online Video]. 15 April 2012 . Available from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hpn9iPLbNDc. [Accessed: 08 September 2013].…

    • 2072 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Night, a memoir written by a holocaust survivor, demonstrates a young Jewish boys experience in the concentration camps. War is a unignorable factor that causes uncomfortable truths such as the inhuman capabilities of people fueled by hate, the hardships that come with questioning a personal moral code in favor of one’s own country, and the lasting mental effects of a war on the people who participated after it is finished to be exposed.…

    • 1362 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Red Scare endured until the mid-1920’s and brought about the periodic suspension of common freedoms, as individuals associated with having socialist ties were frequently threatened and imprisoned. They were dogged by law requirement, distanced from loved ones and terminated from their occupations. Despite the fact that the atmosphere of trepidation and suppression started to ease in the late 1950’s, the Red Scare has kept on impacting Political level headed discussion in the decades since…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Red Scare Research Paper

    • 1477 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Red Scare is the term given to the spread of communism that infiltrated the US government. But communists in America were the strange new kids on the block that nobody thought was going to gain popularity in the political…

    • 1477 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    [4] Robert Gildea, Olivier Wieviorka, Anette Warring, Surviving Hitler and Mussolini: daily life in occupied Europe, (New York: Berg 2006) p. 95.…

    • 2547 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Benito Mussolini outlines several essential characteristics of his preferred political ideology, Fascism, in what has become known as the Doctrine of Fascism. In this paper, Mussolini outlines his vision of the ideology, and explains the major issues that Fascism will address once it becomes the leading political system in Italy. Mussolini’s major points as outlined in the Doctrine included an extreme emphasis on nationalism, organization and modernization of the state, persistent focus on religion, life as a struggle, and the notion that individuals exist only for the improvement of society as a whole. Wolfgang Schieder, after reviewing the Doctrine of Fascism, explains Mussolini’s success based on it and clarifies what exactly Adolf Hitler adopted from the Italian Fascist ideology to incorporated into his own Third Reich.…

    • 1470 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Red Scare

    • 2647 Words
    • 11 Pages

    It was November 18, 1918, the day WWI had officially ended. The last cry of help had been heard and peace was supposedly coming to the United States or it had seemed. An ideological war which prompted mass paranoia had caused, among many other things, what would be known as the Red Scare (****). The Red Scare was the label given to the actions of legislation, the race riots, and the hatred and persecution of "subversives" and conscientious objectors during that period of time. The purpose of this research is to explore the threat that plagued the United States in its’ time of great panic and anxiety, during the “first” Red Scare which lasted between 1919 to 1921. This powerful threat turned out to be Communism and it was greatly feared by almost every U.S. citizen. Communism is “system of social and economic organization in which property is owned by the state group, to be shared in common or to be disturbed among members of the community equally or in proportion to their respective needs. In 1919, no more than one-tenth of the adult American population belonged to the newly formed communist movement, and even this small percentage were greatly persecuted.…

    • 2647 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    When Benito Mussolini concluded his violent and semi-legal seizure of power in Italy on the 29th October 1922, the Fascist era began in victory as crowds of Blackshirts rushed to the capital to celebrate their leader. The aim of this essay is to explain the Fascists’ rise to power in Italy. Thus, whilst the highly repressive nature of Fascism cannot be understated, this essay will focus solely on Italy before Mussolini seized control. Why was Italy the first European country to succumb to Fascism? What factors in her development meant that people were willing to toss aside liberal parliamentary democracy…

    • 2729 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    these battalions with their commotions were woven red and startling into the gentle fabric of the s…

    • 1503 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tecumseh

    • 1021 Words
    • 5 Pages

    [2] Brothers, we are friends; we must assist each other to bear our burdens. The blood of many of our fathers and brothers has run like water on the ground, to satisfy the avarice of the white men. We, ourselves, are threatened with a great evil; nothing will pacify them but the destruction of all the red men.…

    • 1021 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    (Schoenhals, 1996) The campaign called on the nation’s youth to get rid of these negative elements of Chinese society and restore the revolutionary spirit by forming Red Guards groups to insult or punish counter-revolutionist around the country. The movement expanded throughout the society and even the Communist Party leadership itself. As a result, it created a nationwide factional struggles in all walks of life. On top of that, it led to a mass purge of senior officials, most notably Liu and Deng. (Guo, et.al, 2006)…

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Australia 1920's

    • 1807 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The war, which had at first submerged national divisions in a wave of patriotism, had in its last years deepened those divisions, increasing the gulf between radicals and conservatives, those eligible who had fought and those who had not, and adding new divisions between pro- and anti- conscriptionists and between strikers and ‘loyalist’ strike breakers.…

    • 1807 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays