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1956 and the PSI: The end of ‘ten winters’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 January 2016

Ilaria Favretto*
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi di Milano, Facoltà di Scienze Politiche, Dipartimento di Storia della Società e delle Istituzioni, Via Livorno 1, 20122 Milano Italy. E-mail: [email protected]

Summary

The focus of this article is the revisionist course which the Italian Socialist Party embarked upon after 1956 and which led up to the first Centre-Left government. The article challenges two quite well established views. One view is that the transformation experienced by the PSI during the 1956-64 period was simply tactically expedient and devoid of any substance and consistency. This article argues, by contrast, that these years represented, in Alessandro Pizzorno's words, a veritable ‘Copernican revolution’. This period of revisionism was as important as the better-known revisionisms elaborated during the same period by other European Socialist parties such as the German SPD or British Labour. The second main argument is that ‘structural reformism’, the new strategy adopted by the PSI after 1956, was not, as it has often been described, an expression of ‘duplicity’ owing to the party's incapacity to behave like a genuinely reformist party - a phenomenon that has allegedly long characterized parties of the Left. Instead, the strategy was reflected in the changes to European socialism during the early 1960s. In particular, this period marked a contrast to the previous years which were characterized by the dominance of ideas of ‘redistributive’ socialism, à la Anthony Crosland. This period marked also a shift among Socialist parties towards the acceptance of greater state controls over the economy by way of public planning and ownership.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for the study of Modern Italy 

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References

Notes

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64. See for example, Cafagna, , Una strana disfatta, pp. 20–1; Settembrini, Domenico, ‘The Divided Left: After Fascism, What?’, and Pellicani, Luciano, ‘Socialists and Communists’, both in Di Scala, Spencer, Italian Socialism, University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst, 1996, pp. 107–20 and pp. 152–60. In line with the emphasis placed by Italian historiography on the ‘anomaly’ of Italian socialism, the Centre-Left experience is regarded as a further example of the Italian left-wing parties' maximalism as opposed to the gradualism and sense of responsibility of their European counterparts. The limitations of the PSI's revisionism as the key factor of the Centre-Left governments' failure is at the centre of the analyses of those scholars cited in n. 1 above.Google Scholar

65. Crosland, Anthony, The Future of Socialism, Jonathan Cape, London, 1956, p. 19.Google Scholar

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67. See here Pollock, Frederick, Automation. The Economic and Social Consequences of Automation, Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1957, originally published in Germany in 1956 and later translated in several languages including Italian. Pollock's book represented a crucial point of reference for left-wing parties' debate on automation.Google Scholar

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