The Faces of Janus

The Faces of Janus

Cover of the first edition
Authors A. James Gregor
Language English
Subject Marxism, Fascism
Published 2000
Media type Print

The Faces of Janus is a book by A. James Gregor, in which Gregor asserts that there are fundamental errors in Marxist analyses of fascism. He argues that the political spectrum identifying the Left as progressive and the Right as reactionary was (in the words of Franklin Hugh Adler) a dishonest way of "privileging purported movements of the Left and demonizing movements of the Right".[1]

However, Adler also criticises Gregor, saying of the book:

"The tone is often shrill, the style bombastic, the claims exaggerated; in short, vintage Gregor."

Reviewer Harry V. Willems of the Southeast Kansas Library System writes:

"Gregor takes issue with 20th-century historians who make fascism and communism the opposing faces of Janus. Gregor is the first to use Marxist theory systematically to bend the political spectrum from a linear to a circular form. That is, fascism and communism meld into each other. Fascism had its origins in communism, and communism exhibited facets of fascism from its inception."

The American Historical Review wrote that Gregor argues that fascism "was a compelling and coherent synthesis of ideas generated by some of the most creative thinkers of our time."


References

  1. http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m0259/4_94/69277513/p1/article.jhtml
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.