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Totalitarianism

Totalitarianism is a form of government and a political system that prohibits all opposition parties, outlaws individual and group opposition to the state and its claims, and exercises an extremely high if not complete degree of control and regulation over public and private life. It is regarded as the most extreme and complete form of authoritarianism. In totalitarian states, political power is often held by autocrats, such as dictators (totalitarian dictatorship) and absolute monarchs, who employ all-encompassing campaigns in which propaganda is broadcast by state-controlled mass media in order to control the citizenry.[1]

Joseph Stalin (left), leader of the Soviet Union, and Adolf Hitler (right), leader of Nazi Germany—prototypical dictators of totalitarian regimes of the left and right political spectrums respectively.

As a political ideology in itself, totalitarianism is a distinctly modernist phenomenon, and it has very complex historical roots. Philosopher Karl Popper traced its roots to Plato, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's conception of the state, and the political philosophy of Karl Marx,[2] although Popper's conception of totalitarianism has been criticized in academia, and remains highly controversial.[3][4] Other philosophers and historians such as Theodor W. Adorno and Max Horkheimer trace the origin of totalitarian doctrines to the Age of Enlightenment, especially to the anthropocentrist idea that "Man has become the master of the world, a master unbound by any links to nature, society, and history."[5] In the 20th century, the idea of absolute state power was first developed by Italian Fascists, and concurrently in Germany by a jurist and Nazi academic named Carl Schmitt during the Weimar Republic in the 1920s.

Scholars and historians have considered Vladimir Lenin,[6][7][8] founder of the Russian SFSR and later Soviet Union,[9][10][11] to be one of the first to attempt to establish a totalitarian state.[12][13][14][15][16] Benito Mussolini, the founder of Italian Fascism, called his regime the "Totalitarian State": "Everything in the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State."[17] Schmitt used the term Totalstaat (lit.'Total state') in his influential 1927 work titled The Concept of the Political, which described the legal basis of an all-powerful state.[18] By 1950, the term and concept of totalitarianism entered mainstream Western political discourse. Furthermore, this era also saw anti-communist and McCarthyist political movements intensify and use the concept of totalitarianism as a tool to convert pre-World War II anti-fascism into Cold War anti-communism.[19][20][21][22][23]

Totalitarian regimes are different from other authoritarian regimes, as the latter denotes a state in which the single power holder, usually an individual dictator, a committee, a military junta, or an otherwise small group of political elites, monopolizes political power.[24] A totalitarian regime may attempt to control virtually all aspects of social life, including the economy, the education system, arts, science, and the private lives and morals of citizens through the use of an elaborate ideology.[25] It can also mobilize the whole population in pursuit of its goals.[24]

Definition

According to Yale professor Juan José Linz there are three main types of political regimes today: democracies, totalitarian regimes and, sitting between these two, authoritarian regimes (with hybrid regimes).[26][27] Totalitarian regimes are often characterized by extreme political repression and human rights violations to a greater extent than those of authoritarian regimes, an absolute lack of democratic ideals, widespread personality cultism around the person or the group which is in power, absolute control over the economy, large-scale censorship and mass surveillance systems, limited or non-existent freedom of movement (notably the freedom to leave the country), and the widespread usage of state terrorism. Other aspects of a totalitarian regime include the extensive use of violent prison camps, repressive secret police, practices of religious persecution or racism, the imposition of either theocratic rule or state atheism, the common use of death penalties and show trials, fraudulent elections (if elections are held), the possible possession of weapons of mass destruction, a potential for state-sponsored mass murders and genocides, and the possibility of engaging in a war or imperialism against other countries. Historian Robert Conquest describes a totalitarian state as a state which recognizes no limit on its authority in any sphere of public or private life and extends that authority to whatever length it considers feasible.[1]

Totalitarianism is contrasted with authoritarianism. According to Radu Cinpoes, an authoritarian state is "only concerned with political power, and as long as it is not contested it gives society a certain degree of liberty."[24] Cinpoes writes that authoritarianism "does not attempt to change the world and human nature."[24] In contrast, Richard Pipes stated that the officially proclaimed ideology "penetrating into the deepest reaches of societal structure, and the totalitarian government seeks to completely control the thoughts and actions of its citizens."[25] Carl Joachim Friedrich wrote that "[a] totalist ideology, a party reinforced by a secret police, and monopolistic control of industrial mass society are the three features of totalitarian regimes that distinguish them from other autocracies."[24]

Academia and historiography

The academic field of Sovietology after World War II and during the Cold War was dominated by the "totalitarian model" of the Soviet Union,[28] stressing the absolute nature of Joseph Stalin's power. The "totalitarian model" was first outlined in the 1950s by Carl Joachim Friedrich, who posited that the Soviet Union and other Communist states were "totalitarian" systems, with the personality cult and almost unlimited powers of the "great leader" such as Stalin.[29] The "revisionist school" beginning in the 1960s focused on relatively autonomous institutions which might influence policy at the higher level.[30] Matt Lenoe described the "revisionist school" as representing those who "insisted that the old image of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian state bent on world domination was oversimplified or just plain wrong. They tended to be interested in social history and to argue that the Communist Party leadership had had to adjust to social forces."[31] These of "revisionist school" such as J. Arch Getty and Lynne Viola challenged the "totalitarian model" approach to Communist history, which was considered to be outdated by the 1980s and for the post-Stalinist era in particular,[32] and were most active in the former Communist states' archives, especially the State Archive of the Russian Federation related to the Soviet Union.[30][33]

According to John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, the historiography is characterized by a split between "traditionalists" and "revisionists." "Traditionalists" characterize themselves as objective reporters of an alleged totalitarian nature of communism and Communist states. They are criticized by their opponents as being anti-communist, even fascist, in their eagerness on continuing to focus on the issues of the Cold War. Alternative characterizations for traditionalists include "anti-communist", "conservative", "Draperite" (after Theodore Draper), "orthodox", and "right-wing."[34] Norman Markowitz,[35] a prominent "revisionist", referred to them as "reactionaries", "right-wing romantics", and "triumphalist" who belong to the "HUAC school of CPUSA scholarship."[34] "Revisionists", characterized by Haynes and Klehr as historical revisionists, are more numerous and dominate academic institutions and learned journals.[34] A suggested alternative formulation is "new historians of American communism", but that has not caught on because these historians describe themselves as unbiased and scholarly, contrasting their work to the work of anti-communist "traditionalists", whom they term biased and unscholarly.[34]

According to William Zimmerman in 1980, "the Soviet Union has changed substantially. Our knowledge of the Soviet Union has changed as well. We all know that the traditional paradigm no longer satisfies, despite several efforts, primarily in the early 1960s (the directed society, totalitarianism without terror, the mobilization system) to articulate an acceptable variant. We have come to realize that models which were, in effect, offshoots of totalitarian models do not provide good approximations of post-Stalinist reality."[32] According to Michael Scott Christofferson in 2019, "Arendt's reading of the post-Stalin USSR can be seen as an attempt to distance her work from 'the Cold War misuse of the concept.'"[36]

Historian John Connelly wrote that totalitarianism is a useful word but that the old 1950s theory about it is defunct among scholars. Connelly wrote: "The word is as functional now as it was 50 years ago. It means the kind of regime that existed in Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, the Soviet satellites, Communist China, and maybe Fascist Italy, where the word originated. ... Who are we to tell Václav Havel or Adam Michnik that they were fooling themselves when they perceived their rulers as totalitarian? Or for that matter any of the millions of former subjects of Soviet-type rule who use the local equivalents of the Czech totalita to describe the systems they lived under before 1989? It is a useful word and everyone knows what it means as a general referent. Problems arise when people confuse the useful descriptive term with the old 'theory' from the 1950s."[37]

Politics

Early usage

 
Benito Mussolini, Duce of Fascist Italy from 1922 to 1943

The notion that totalitarianism is total political power which is exercised by the state was formulated in 1923 by Giovanni Amendola, who described Italian Fascism as a system which was fundamentally different from conventional dictatorships.[25] The term was later assigned a positive meaning in the writings of Giovanni Gentile, Italy's most prominent philosopher and leading theorist of fascism. He used the term totalitario to refer to the structure and goals of the new state which was to provide the "total representation of the nation and total guidance of national goals."[38] He described totalitarianism as a society in which the ideology of the state had influence, if not power, over most of its citizens.[39] According to Benito Mussolini, this system politicizes everything spiritual and human: "Everything within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state."[25][40]

One of the first people to use the term totalitarianism in the English language was the Austrian writer Franz Borkenau in his 1938 book The Communist International, in which he commented that it united the Soviet and German dictatorships more than it divided them.[41] The label totalitarian was twice affixed to Nazi Germany during Winston Churchill's speech of 5 October 1938, before the House of Commons in opposition to the Munich Agreement, by which France and Great Britain consented to Nazi Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland.[42] Churchill was then a backbencher MP representing the Epping constituency. In a radio address two weeks later, Churchill again employed the term, this time applying the concept to "a Communist or a Nazi tyranny."[43]

José María Gil-Robles y Quiñones, the leader of the historic Spanish reactionary party called the Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right (CEDA),[44] declared his intention to "give Spain a true unity, a new spirit, a totalitarian polity" and went on to say: "Democracy is not an end but a means to the conquest of the new state. When the time comes, either parliament submits or we will eliminate it."[45] General Francisco Franco was determined not to have competing right-wing parties in Spain and CEDA was dissolved in April 1937. Later, Gil-Robles went into exile.[46]

George Orwell made frequent use of the word totalitarian and its cognates in multiple essays published in 1940, 1941 and 1942. In his essay "Why I Write", Orwell wrote: "The Spanish war and other events in 1936–37 turned the scale and thereafter I knew where I stood. Every line of serious work that I have written since 1936 has been written, directly or indirectly, against totalitarianism and for democratic socialism, as I understand it." He feared that future totalitarian regimes could exploit technological advances in surveillance and mass media in order to establish a permanent and worldwide dictatorship which would be incapable of ever being overthrown, writing: "If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—forever."[47]

During a 1945 lecture series entitled "The Soviet Impact on the Western World" and published as a book in 1946, the British historian E. H. Carr wrote: "The trend away from individualism and towards totalitarianism is everywhere unmistakable" and that Marxism–Leninism was by far the most successful type of totalitarianism as proved by Soviet industrial growth and the Red Army's role in defeating Germany. According to Carr, only the "blind and incurable" could ignore the trend towards totalitarianism.[48]

In The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945) and The Poverty of Historicism (1961), Karl Popper articulated an influential critique of totalitarianism. In both works, Popper contrasted the "open society" of liberal democracy with totalitarianism and posited that the latter is grounded in the belief that history moves toward an immutable future in accordance with knowable laws.[citation needed]

Cold War

 
Carl Joachin Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski (pictured) popularized the concept of totalitarianism, alongside Hannah Arendt.[37]

In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt posited that Nazi and Communist regimes were new forms of government and not merely updated versions of the old tyrannies. According to Arendt, the source of the mass appeal of totalitarian regimes is their ideology which provides a comforting and single answer to the mysteries of the past, present and future. For Nazism, all history is the history of race struggle and for Marxism–Leninism all history is the history of class struggle. Once that premise is accepted, all actions of the state can be justified by appeal to nature or the law of history, justifying their establishment of authoritarian state apparatus.[49]

In addition to Arendt, many scholars from a variety of academic backgrounds and ideological positions have closely examined totalitarianism. Among the most noted commentators on totalitarianism are Raymond Aron, Lawrence Aronsen, Franz Borkenau, Karl Dietrich Bracher, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Robert Conquest, Carl Joachim Friedrich, Eckhard Jesse, Leopold Labedz, Walter Laqueur, Claude Lefort, Juan Linz, Richard Löwenthal, Karl Popper, Richard Pipes, Leonard Schapiro and Adam Ulam. Each one of these described totalitarianism in slightly different ways, but they all agreed that totalitarianism seeks to mobilize entire populations in support of an official party ideology and is intolerant of activities that are not directed towards the goals of the party, entailing repression or state control of the business, labour unions, non-profit organizations, religious organizations and minor political parties. At the same time, many scholars from a variety of academic backgrounds and ideological positions criticized the theorists of totalitarianism. Among the most noted were Louis Althusser, Benjamin Barber, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Jean-Paul Sartre. They thought that totalitarianism was connected to Western ideologies and associated with evaluation rather than analysis. The concept became prominent in the Western world's anti-communist political discourse during the Cold War era as a tool to convert pre-war anti-fascism into postwar anti-communism.[19][20][21][22][23]

In 1956, the political scientists Carl Joachim Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski were primarily responsible for expanding the usage of the term in university social science and professional research, reformulating it as a paradigm for the Soviet Union as well as fascist regimes.[50] Friedrich and Brzezinski wrote that a totalitarian system has the following six mutually supportive and defining characteristics:[51]

  1. Elaborate guiding ideology.
  2. Single mass party, typically led by a dictator.
  3. System of terror, using such instruments as violence and secret police.
  4. Monopoly on weapons.
  5. Monopoly on the means of communication.
  6. Central direction and control of the economy through state planning.

In the book titled Democracy and Totalitarianism (1968), French analyst Raymond Aron outlined five criteria for a regime to be considered as totalitarian:[52]

  1. A one-party state where one party has a monopoly on all political activity.
  2. A state ideology upheld by the ruling party that is given status as the only authority.
  3. State information monopoly that controls mass media for distribution of official truth.
  4. State controlled economy with major economic entities under the control of the state.
  5. Ideological terror that turns economic or professional actions into crimes. Violators are exposed to prosecution and to ideological persecution.
 
 
Under the dictatorships of Hafez al-Assad (left) and his son Bashar al-Assad (right), Ba'thist Syria has been ruled by one of the few surviving cold-war era totalitarian regimes to the present day[53][54][55]

According to this view, totalitarian regimes in Germany, Italy, and the Soviet Union had initial origins in the chaos that followed in the wake of World War I and allowed totalitarian movements to seize control of the government while the sophistication of modern weapons and communications enabled them to effectively establish what Friedrich and Brzezinski called a "totalitarian dictatorship."[56] Some social scientists have criticized Friedrich and Brzezinski's totalitarian approach, commenting that the Soviet system, both as a political and as a social entity, was in fact better understood in terms of interest groups, competing elites, or even in class terms, using the concept of the nomenklatura as a vehicle for a new ruling class (new class). These critics posit that there is evidence of the widespread dispersion of power, at least in the implementation of policy, among sectoral and regional authorities. For some followers of this pluralist approach, this was evidence of the ability of the regime to adapt to include new demands; however, proponents of the totalitarian model stated that the failure of the system to survive showed not only its inability to adapt but the mere formality of supposed popular participation.[57]

German historian Karl Dietrich Bracher, whose work is primarily concerned with Nazi Germany, posited that the "totalitarian typology" as developed by Friedrich and Brzezinski is an excessively inflexible model and failed to consider the "revolutionary dynamic" that for Bracher is at the heart of totalitarianism.[58] Bracher posited that the essence of totalitarianism is the total claim to control and remake all aspects of society combined with an all-embracing ideology, the value on authoritarian leadership and the pretence of the common identity of state and society which distinguished the totalitarian "closed" understanding of politics from the "open" democratic understanding.[58] Unlike the Friedrich and Brzezinski definition, Bracher said that totalitarian regimes did not require a single leader and could function with a collective leadership which led the American historian Walter Laqueur to posit that Bracher's definition seemed to fit reality better than the Friedrich–Brzezinski definition.[59] Bracher's typologies came under attack from Werner Conze and other historians, who felt that Bracher "lost sight of the historical material" and used "universal, ahistorical concepts."[60]

In his 1951 book The True Believer, Eric Hoffer posited that mass movements such as fascism, Nazism and Stalinism had a common trait in picturing Western democracies and their values as decadent, with people "too soft, too pleasure-loving and too selfish" to sacrifice for a higher cause, which for them implies an inner moral and biological decay. Hoffer added that those movements offered the prospect of a glorious future to frustrated people, enabling them to find a refuge from the lack of personal accomplishments in their individual existence. The individual is then assimilated into a compact collective body and "fact-proof screens from reality" are established.[61] This stance may be connected to a religious fear for Communists. Paul Hanebrink has posited that many European Christians started to fear Communist regimes after the rise of Hitler, commenting: "For many European Christians, Catholic and Protestant alike, the new postwar 'culture war' crystallized as a struggle against communism. Across interwar Europe, Christians demonized the Communist regime in Russia as the apotheosis of secular materialism and a militarized threat to Christian social and moral order."[62] For Hanebrink, Christians saw Communist regimes as a threat to their moral order and hoped to lead European nations back to their Christian roots by creating an anti-totalitarian census, which defined Europe in the early Cold War.[63]

Post–Cold War

 
President Isaias Afwerki (right) has ruled Eritrea as a totalitarian dictator since the country's independence in 1993.[64]

Laure Neumayer posited that "despite the disputes over its heuristic value and its normative assumptions, the concept of totalitarianism made a vigorous return to the political and academic fields at the end of the Cold War."[65] In the 1990s, François Furet made a comparative analysis[66] and used the term totalitarian twins to link Nazism and Stalinism.[67][68][69] Eric Hobsbawm criticized Furet for his temptation to stress the existence of a common ground between two systems with different ideological roots.[70]

In Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism?: Five Interventions in the (Mis)Use of a Notion, Žižek wrote that "[t]he liberating effect" of General Augusto Pinochet's arrest "was exceptional", as "the fear of Pinochet dissipated, the spell was broken, the taboo subjects of torture and disappearances became the daily grist of the news media; the people no longer just whispered, but openly spoke about prosecuting him in Chile itself."[71] Saladdin Ahmed cited Hannah Arendt as stating that "the Soviet Union can no longer be called totalitarian in the strict sense of the term after Stalin's death", writing that "this was the case in General August Pinochet's Chile, yet it would be absurd to exempt it from the class of totalitarian regimes for that reason alone." Saladdin posited that while Chile under Pinochet had no "official ideology", there was one man who ruled Chile from "behind the scenes", "none other than Milton Friedman, the godfather of neoliberalism and the most influential teacher of the Chicago Boys, was Pinochet's adviser." In this sense, Saladdin criticized the totalitarian concept because it was only being applied to "opposing ideologies" and it was not being applied to liberalism.[36]

In the early 2010s, Richard Shorten, Vladimir Tismăneanu, and Aviezer Tucker posited that totalitarian ideologies can take different forms in different political systems but all of them focus on utopianism, scientism, or political violence. They posit that Nazism and Stalinism both emphasized the role of specialization in modern societies and they also saw polymathy as a thing of the past, and they also stated that their claims were supported by statistics and science, which led them to impose strict ethical regulations on culture, use psychological violence, and persecute entire groups.[72][73][74] Their arguments have been criticized by other scholars due to their partiality and anachronism. Juan Francisco Fuentes treats totalitarianism as an "invented tradition" and he believes that the notion of "modern despotism" is a "reverse anachronism"; for Fuentes, "the anachronistic use of totalitarian/totalitarianism involves the will to reshape the past in the image and likeness of the present."[75]

 
Kim Il-Sung was a totalitarian leader and founder of North Korea. [76]

Other studies try to link modern technological changes to totalitarianism. According to Shoshana Zuboff, the economic pressures of modern surveillance capitalism are driving the intensification of connection and monitoring online with spaces of social life becoming open to saturation by corporate actors, directed at the making of profit and/or the regulation of action.[77] Toby Ord believed that Orwell's fears of totalitarianism constituted a notable early precursor to modern notions of anthropogenic existential risk, the concept that a future catastrophe could permanently destroy the potential of Earth-originating intelligent life due in part to technological changes, creating a permanent technological dystopia. Ord said that Orwell's writings show that his concern was genuine rather than just a throwaway part of the fictional plot of Nineteen Eighty-Four. In 1949, Orwell wrote that "[a] ruling class which could guard against (four previously enumerated sources of risk) would remain in power permanently."[78] That same year, Bertrand Russell wrote that "modern techniques have made possible a new intensity of governmental control, and this possibility has been exploited very fully in totalitarian states."[79]

In the late 2010s, The Economist has described China's developed Social Credit System under Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping's administration, to screen and rank its citizens based on their personal behavior, as totalitarian.[80] Opponents of China's ranking system say that it is intrusive and it is just another tool which a one-party state can use to control the population. The New York Times compared Chinese paramount leader Xi Jinping's cult of personality and his ideology Xi Jinping Thought to that of Mao Zedong during the Cold War.[81] Supporters say that it will transform China into a more civilized and law-abiding society.[82] Shoshana Zuboff considers it instrumentarian rather than totalitarian.[83] Other emerging technologies that could empower future totalitarian regimes include brain-reading, contact tracing and various applications of artificial intelligence.[84][85][86][87] Philosopher Nick Bostrom said that there is a possible trade-off, namely that some existential risks might be mitigated by the establishment of a powerful and permanent world government, and in turn the establishment of such a government could enhance the existential risks which are associated with the rule of a permanent dictatorship.[88]

Religious totalitarianism

The Taliban is a totalitarian Sunni Islamist militant group and political movement in Afghanistan that emerged in the aftermath of the Soviet-Afghan War and the end of the Cold War. It governed most of Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001 and won full control of Afghanistan in 2021. Features of its totalitarian governance include the imposition of Pashtunwali culture of the plurality Pashtun ethnic group as religious law, the exclusion of minorities and non-Taliban members from the government, and extensive violations of women's rights.[89]

 
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, self-proclaimed Caliph of the Islamic State, ruled as the dictator of a totalitarian quasi-state that controlled parts of Iraq and Syria from 2014 to 2019

The Islamic State is a Salafi-Jihadist terrorist group founded by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 1999, which espouses a totalitarian ideology that is a fundamentalist hybrid of Global Jihadism, Wahhabism and Qutbism. In 2014, the group declared itself as a caliphate[a] that sought world domination and established what has been described as a "political-religious totalitarian regime". The quasi-state held significant territory in Iraq and Syria during the course of the War in Iraq and the Syrian civil war from 2013 to 2019 under the dictatorship of its first Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who imposed an extreme form of Sharia law.[93][94][95][96] The city of Geneva under John Calvin's leadership has been characterized as totalitarian by scholars.[97][98][99]

Views on totalitarianism by historians of the Soviet Union since the 1970s

Some recent historians of the Soviet Union now consider the concept of totalitarianism to be an oversimplification that does not accurately reflect the reality of life in the Soviet Union. The idea was first challenged by a generation of historians who came to prominence in the 1970s, and whose perspectives came to be known as the "revisionist school". Some of whose more prominent members were Sheila Fitzpatrick, J. Arch Getty, Jerry F. Hough, William McCagg, and Robert W. Thurston.[100] Although their individual interpretations differ, the revisionists say that the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin was in many ways institutionally weak, and that terror reflected the weaknesses rather than the strengths of the Soviet state.[100] They argue that Soviet citizens were not totally devoid of agency or resources and atomised by ideology as the totalitarian perspective implies. Rather, they successfully developed practices that helped them to navigate everyday life at a time of considerable danger and multiple shortages.[101] For example, Arch Getty claims that "the Soviet political system was chaotic, that institutions often escaped the control of the centre, and that Stalin’s leadership consisted to a considerable extent in responding, on an ad hoc basis, to political crises as they arose.".[102] In addition, scholars such as Fitzpatrick have stressed that the regime relied on the popular support for legitimation as much as it did on terror. By purging society of groups deemed 'anti-Soviet', new job opportunities opened up for an entire cohort of young, working class citizens, who saw dramatic, upward social mobility that they could scarcely have dreamed of before the revolution. These "beneficiaries" of the violence became fiercely loyal to Stalin and the Soviet regime. To them, it appeared the promise of the revolution had been fulfilled. They became willing to defend and support Stalin not in spite of terror, but because of it.[103]

In the case of East Germany, Eli Rubin posited that East Germany was not a totalitarian state but rather a society shaped by the confluence of unique economic and political circumstances interacting with the concerns of ordinary citizens.[104]

Writing in 1987, Walter Laqueur posited that the revisionists in the field of Soviet history were guilty of confusing popularity with morality and of making highly embarrassing and not very convincing arguments against the concept of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian state.[105] Laqueur stated that the revisionists' arguments with regard to Soviet history were highly similar to the arguments made by Ernst Nolte regarding German history.[105] For Laqueur, concepts such as modernization were inadequate tools for explaining Soviet history while totalitarianism was not.[106] Laqueur's argument has been criticized by modern "revisionist school" historians such as Paul Buhle, who said that Laqueur wrongly equates Cold War revisionism with the German revisionism; the latter reflected a "revanchist, military-minded conservative nationalism."[107] Moreover, Michael Parenti and James Petras have suggested that the totalitarianism concept has been politically employed and used for anti-communist purposes. Parenti has also analysed how "left anti-communism" attacked the Soviet Union during the Cold War.[108] For Petras, the CIA funded the Congress for Cultural Freedom in order to attack "Stalinist anti-totalitarianism."[109] Into the 21st century, Enzo Traverso has attacked the creators of the concept of totalitarianism as having invented it to designate the enemies of the West.[110]

According to some scholars, calling Joseph Stalin totalitarian instead of authoritarian has been asserted to be a high-sounding but specious excuse for Western self-interest, just as surely as the counterclaim that allegedly debunking the totalitarian concept may be a high-sounding but specious excuse for Russian self-interest. For Domenico Losurdo, totalitarianism is a polysemic concept with origins in Christian theology and applying it to the political sphere requires an operation of abstract schematism which makes use of isolated elements of historical reality to place fascist regimes and the Soviet Union in the dock together, serving the anti-communism of Cold War-era intellectuals rather than reflecting intellectual research.[111] Other scholars, among them F. William Engdahl, Sheldon Wolin, and Slavoj Žižek, have linked totalitarianism to capitalism and liberalism, and used concepts such as inverted totalitarianism,[112] totalitarian capitalism,[113] and totalitarian democracy.[114][115][116]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Arendt, Hannah, The Origins of Totalitarianism (New York: Schocken Books, 1958, new ed. 1966). online
  • Armstrong, John A. The Politics of Totalitarianism (New York: Random House, 1961).
  • Béja, Jean-Philippe (March 2019). "Xi Jinping's China: On the Road to Neo-totalitarianism". Social Research: An International Quarterly. 86 (1): 203–230. doi:10.1353/sor.2019.0009. S2CID 199140716. ProQuest 2249726077. from the original on December 3, 2022.
  • Bernholz, Peter. "Ideocracy and totalitarianism: A formal analysis incorporating ideology", Public Choice 108, 2001, pp. 33–75.
  • Bernholz, Peter. "Ideology, sects, state and totalitarianism. A general theory". In: H. Maier and M. Schaefer (eds.): Totalitarianism and Political Religions, Vol. II (Routledge, 2007), pp. 246–270.
  • Borkenau, Franz, The Totalitarian Enemy (London: Faber and Faber 1940).
  • Bracher, Karl Dietrich, "The Disputed Concept of Totalitarianism," pp. 11–33 from Totalitarianism Reconsidered edited by Ernest A. Menze (Kennikat Press, 1981) ISBN 0804692688.
  • Congleton, Roger D. "Governance by true believers: Supreme duties with and without totalitarianism." Constitutional Political Economy 31.1 (2020): 111–141. online
  • Connelly, John. "Totalitarianism: Defunct Theory, Useful Word" Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 11#4 (2010) 819–835. online.
  • Curtis, Michael. Totalitarianism (1979) online
  • Devlin, Nicholas. "Hannah Arendt and Marxist Theories of Totalitarianism." Modern Intellectual History (2021): 1–23 online.
  • Diamond, Larry. "The road to digital unfreedom: The threat of postmodern totalitarianism." Journal of Democracy 30.1 (2019): 20–24. excerpt
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila, and Michael Geyer, eds. Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
  • Friedrich, Carl and Z. K. Brzezinski, Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy (Harvard University Press, 1st ed. 1956, 2nd ed. 1967).
  • Gach, Nataliia. "From totalitarianism to democracy: Building learner autonomy in Ukrainian higher education." Issues in Educational Research 30.2 (2020): 532–554. online
  • Gleason, Abbott. Totalitarianism: The Inner History Of The Cold War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), ISBN 0195050177.
  • Gregor, A. Totalitarianism and political religion (Stanford University Press, 2020).
  • Hanebrink, Paul. "European Protestants Between Anti-Communism and Anti-Totalitarianism: The Other Interwar Kulturkampf?" Journal of Contemporary History (July 2018) Vol. 53, Issue 3, pp. 622–643
  • Hermet, Guy, with Pierre Hassner and Jacques Rupnik, Totalitarismes (Paris: Éditions Economica, 1984).
  • Jainchill, Andrew, and Samuel Moyn. "French democracy between totalitarianism and solidarity: Pierre Rosanvallon and revisionist historiography." Journal of Modern History 76.1 (2004): 107–154. online
  • Joscelyne, Sophie. "Norman Mailer and American Totalitarianism in the 1960s." Modern Intellectual History 19.1 (2022): 241–267 online.
  • Keller, Marcello Sorce. "Why is Music so Ideological, Why Do Totalitarian States Take It So Seriously", Journal of Musicological Research, XXVI (2007), no. 2–3, pp. 91–122.
  • Kirkpatrick, Jeane, Dictatorships and Double Standards: Rationalism and reason in politics (London: Simon & Schuster, 1982).
  • Laqueur, Walter, The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History From 1917 to the Present (London: Collier Books, 1987) ISBN 002034080X.
  • Menze, Ernest, ed. Totalitarianism reconsidered (1981) online essays by experts
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External links

Notes

  1. ^ Caliphate claim of "Islamic State" group is disputed and declared as illegal by traditional Islamic scholarship.[90][91][92]

totalitarianism, form, government, political, system, that, prohibits, opposition, parties, outlaws, individual, group, opposition, state, claims, exercises, extremely, high, complete, degree, control, regulation, over, public, private, life, regarded, most, e. Totalitarianism is a form of government and a political system that prohibits all opposition parties outlaws individual and group opposition to the state and its claims and exercises an extremely high if not complete degree of control and regulation over public and private life It is regarded as the most extreme and complete form of authoritarianism In totalitarian states political power is often held by autocrats such as dictators totalitarian dictatorship and absolute monarchs who employ all encompassing campaigns in which propaganda is broadcast by state controlled mass media in order to control the citizenry 1 Joseph Stalin left leader of the Soviet Union and Adolf Hitler right leader of Nazi Germany prototypical dictators of totalitarian regimes of the left and right political spectrums respectively As a political ideology in itself totalitarianism is a distinctly modernist phenomenon and it has very complex historical roots Philosopher Karl Popper traced its roots to Plato Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel s conception of the state and the political philosophy of Karl Marx 2 although Popper s conception of totalitarianism has been criticized in academia and remains highly controversial 3 4 Other philosophers and historians such as Theodor W Adorno and Max Horkheimer trace the origin of totalitarian doctrines to the Age of Enlightenment especially to the anthropocentrist idea that Man has become the master of the world a master unbound by any links to nature society and history 5 In the 20th century the idea of absolute state power was first developed by Italian Fascists and concurrently in Germany by a jurist and Nazi academic named Carl Schmitt during the Weimar Republic in the 1920s Scholars and historians have considered Vladimir Lenin 6 7 8 founder of the Russian SFSR and later Soviet Union 9 10 11 to be one of the first to attempt to establish a totalitarian state 12 13 14 15 16 Benito Mussolini the founder of Italian Fascism called his regime the Totalitarian State Everything in the State nothing outside the State nothing against the State 17 Schmitt used the term Totalstaat lit Total state in his influential 1927 work titled The Concept of the Political which described the legal basis of an all powerful state 18 By 1950 the term and concept of totalitarianism entered mainstream Western political discourse Furthermore this era also saw anti communist and McCarthyist political movements intensify and use the concept of totalitarianism as a tool to convert pre World War II anti fascism into Cold War anti communism 19 20 21 22 23 Totalitarian regimes are different from other authoritarian regimes as the latter denotes a state in which the single power holder usually an individual dictator a committee a military junta or an otherwise small group of political elites monopolizes political power 24 A totalitarian regime may attempt to control virtually all aspects of social life including the economy the education system arts science and the private lives and morals of citizens through the use of an elaborate ideology 25 It can also mobilize the whole population in pursuit of its goals 24 Contents 1 Definition 2 Academia and historiography 3 Politics 3 1 Early usage 3 2 Cold War 3 3 Post Cold War 3 4 Religious totalitarianism 4 Views on totalitarianism by historians of the Soviet Union since the 1970s 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External links 9 NotesDefinition EditAccording to Yale professor Juan Jose Linz there are three main types of political regimes today democracies totalitarian regimes and sitting between these two authoritarian regimes with hybrid regimes 26 27 Totalitarian regimes are often characterized by extreme political repression and human rights violations to a greater extent than those of authoritarian regimes an absolute lack of democratic ideals widespread personality cultism around the person or the group which is in power absolute control over the economy large scale censorship and mass surveillance systems limited or non existent freedom of movement notably the freedom to leave the country and the widespread usage of state terrorism Other aspects of a totalitarian regime include the extensive use of violent prison camps repressive secret police practices of religious persecution or racism the imposition of either theocratic rule or state atheism the common use of death penalties and show trials fraudulent elections if elections are held the possible possession of weapons of mass destruction a potential for state sponsored mass murders and genocides and the possibility of engaging in a war or imperialism against other countries Historian Robert Conquest describes a totalitarian state as a state which recognizes no limit on its authority in any sphere of public or private life and extends that authority to whatever length it considers feasible 1 Totalitarianism is contrasted with authoritarianism According to Radu Cinpoes an authoritarian state is only concerned with political power and as long as it is not contested it gives society a certain degree of liberty 24 Cinpoes writes that authoritarianism does not attempt to change the world and human nature 24 In contrast Richard Pipes stated that the officially proclaimed ideology penetrating into the deepest reaches of societal structure and the totalitarian government seeks to completely control the thoughts and actions of its citizens 25 Carl Joachim Friedrich wrote that a totalist ideology a party reinforced by a secret police and monopolistic control of industrial mass society are the three features of totalitarian regimes that distinguish them from other autocracies 24 Academia and historiography EditThe academic field of Sovietology after World War II and during the Cold War was dominated by the totalitarian model of the Soviet Union 28 stressing the absolute nature of Joseph Stalin s power The totalitarian model was first outlined in the 1950s by Carl Joachim Friedrich who posited that the Soviet Union and other Communist states were totalitarian systems with the personality cult and almost unlimited powers of the great leader such as Stalin 29 The revisionist school beginning in the 1960s focused on relatively autonomous institutions which might influence policy at the higher level 30 Matt Lenoe described the revisionist school as representing those who insisted that the old image of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian state bent on world domination was oversimplified or just plain wrong They tended to be interested in social history and to argue that the Communist Party leadership had had to adjust to social forces 31 These of revisionist school such as J Arch Getty and Lynne Viola challenged the totalitarian model approach to Communist history which was considered to be outdated by the 1980s and for the post Stalinist era in particular 32 and were most active in the former Communist states archives especially the State Archive of the Russian Federation related to the Soviet Union 30 33 According to John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr the historiography is characterized by a split between traditionalists and revisionists Traditionalists characterize themselves as objective reporters of an alleged totalitarian nature of communism and Communist states They are criticized by their opponents as being anti communist even fascist in their eagerness on continuing to focus on the issues of the Cold War Alternative characterizations for traditionalists include anti communist conservative Draperite after Theodore Draper orthodox and right wing 34 Norman Markowitz 35 a prominent revisionist referred to them as reactionaries right wing romantics and triumphalist who belong to the HUAC school of CPUSA scholarship 34 Revisionists characterized by Haynes and Klehr as historical revisionists are more numerous and dominate academic institutions and learned journals 34 A suggested alternative formulation is new historians of American communism but that has not caught on because these historians describe themselves as unbiased and scholarly contrasting their work to the work of anti communist traditionalists whom they term biased and unscholarly 34 According to William Zimmerman in 1980 the Soviet Union has changed substantially Our knowledge of the Soviet Union has changed as well We all know that the traditional paradigm no longer satisfies despite several efforts primarily in the early 1960s the directed society totalitarianism without terror the mobilization system to articulate an acceptable variant We have come to realize that models which were in effect offshoots of totalitarian models do not provide good approximations of post Stalinist reality 32 According to Michael Scott Christofferson in 2019 Arendt s reading of the post Stalin USSR can be seen as an attempt to distance her work from the Cold War misuse of the concept 36 Historian John Connelly wrote that totalitarianism is a useful word but that the old 1950s theory about it is defunct among scholars Connelly wrote The word is as functional now as it was 50 years ago It means the kind of regime that existed in Nazi Germany the Soviet Union the Soviet satellites Communist China and maybe Fascist Italy where the word originated Who are we to tell Vaclav Havel or Adam Michnik that they were fooling themselves when they perceived their rulers as totalitarian Or for that matter any of the millions of former subjects of Soviet type rule who use the local equivalents of the Czech totalita to describe the systems they lived under before 1989 It is a useful word and everyone knows what it means as a general referent Problems arise when people confuse the useful descriptive term with the old theory from the 1950s 37 Politics EditEarly usage Edit Benito Mussolini Duce of Fascist Italy from 1922 to 1943 The notion that totalitarianism is total political power which is exercised by the state was formulated in 1923 by Giovanni Amendola who described Italian Fascism as a system which was fundamentally different from conventional dictatorships 25 The term was later assigned a positive meaning in the writings of Giovanni Gentile Italy s most prominent philosopher and leading theorist of fascism He used the term totalitario to refer to the structure and goals of the new state which was to provide the total representation of the nation and total guidance of national goals 38 He described totalitarianism as a society in which the ideology of the state had influence if not power over most of its citizens 39 According to Benito Mussolini this system politicizes everything spiritual and human Everything within the state nothing outside the state nothing against the state 25 40 One of the first people to use the term totalitarianism in the English language was the Austrian writer Franz Borkenau in his 1938 book The Communist International in which he commented that it united the Soviet and German dictatorships more than it divided them 41 The label totalitarian was twice affixed to Nazi Germany during Winston Churchill s speech of 5 October 1938 before the House of Commons in opposition to the Munich Agreement by which France and Great Britain consented to Nazi Germany s annexation of the Sudetenland 42 Churchill was then a backbencher MP representing the Epping constituency In a radio address two weeks later Churchill again employed the term this time applying the concept to a Communist or a Nazi tyranny 43 Jose Maria Gil Robles y Quinones the leader of the historic Spanish reactionary party called the Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right CEDA 44 declared his intention to give Spain a true unity a new spirit a totalitarian polity and went on to say Democracy is not an end but a means to the conquest of the new state When the time comes either parliament submits or we will eliminate it 45 General Francisco Franco was determined not to have competing right wing parties in Spain and CEDA was dissolved in April 1937 Later Gil Robles went into exile 46 George Orwell made frequent use of the word totalitarian and its cognates in multiple essays published in 1940 1941 and 1942 In his essay Why I Write Orwell wrote The Spanish war and other events in 1936 37 turned the scale and thereafter I knew where I stood Every line of serious work that I have written since 1936 has been written directly or indirectly against totalitarianism and for democratic socialism as I understand it He feared that future totalitarian regimes could exploit technological advances in surveillance and mass media in order to establish a permanent and worldwide dictatorship which would be incapable of ever being overthrown writing If you want a vision of the future imagine a boot stamping on a human face forever 47 During a 1945 lecture series entitled The Soviet Impact on the Western World and published as a book in 1946 the British historian E H Carr wrote The trend away from individualism and towards totalitarianism is everywhere unmistakable and that Marxism Leninism was by far the most successful type of totalitarianism as proved by Soviet industrial growth and the Red Army s role in defeating Germany According to Carr only the blind and incurable could ignore the trend towards totalitarianism 48 In The Open Society and Its Enemies 1945 and The Poverty of Historicism 1961 Karl Popper articulated an influential critique of totalitarianism In both works Popper contrasted the open society of liberal democracy with totalitarianism and posited that the latter is grounded in the belief that history moves toward an immutable future in accordance with knowable laws citation needed Cold War Edit Carl Joachin Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski pictured popularized the concept of totalitarianism alongside Hannah Arendt 37 In The Origins of Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt posited that Nazi and Communist regimes were new forms of government and not merely updated versions of the old tyrannies According to Arendt the source of the mass appeal of totalitarian regimes is their ideology which provides a comforting and single answer to the mysteries of the past present and future For Nazism all history is the history of race struggle and for Marxism Leninism all history is the history of class struggle Once that premise is accepted all actions of the state can be justified by appeal to nature or the law of history justifying their establishment of authoritarian state apparatus 49 In addition to Arendt many scholars from a variety of academic backgrounds and ideological positions have closely examined totalitarianism Among the most noted commentators on totalitarianism are Raymond Aron Lawrence Aronsen Franz Borkenau Karl Dietrich Bracher Zbigniew Brzezinski Robert Conquest Carl Joachim Friedrich Eckhard Jesse Leopold Labedz Walter Laqueur Claude Lefort Juan Linz Richard Lowenthal Karl Popper Richard Pipes Leonard Schapiro and Adam Ulam Each one of these described totalitarianism in slightly different ways but they all agreed that totalitarianism seeks to mobilize entire populations in support of an official party ideology and is intolerant of activities that are not directed towards the goals of the party entailing repression or state control of the business labour unions non profit organizations religious organizations and minor political parties At the same time many scholars from a variety of academic backgrounds and ideological positions criticized the theorists of totalitarianism Among the most noted were Louis Althusser Benjamin Barber Maurice Merleau Ponty and Jean Paul Sartre They thought that totalitarianism was connected to Western ideologies and associated with evaluation rather than analysis The concept became prominent in the Western world s anti communist political discourse during the Cold War era as a tool to convert pre war anti fascism into postwar anti communism 19 20 21 22 23 In 1956 the political scientists Carl Joachim Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski were primarily responsible for expanding the usage of the term in university social science and professional research reformulating it as a paradigm for the Soviet Union as well as fascist regimes 50 Friedrich and Brzezinski wrote that a totalitarian system has the following six mutually supportive and defining characteristics 51 Elaborate guiding ideology Single mass party typically led by a dictator System of terror using such instruments as violence and secret police Monopoly on weapons Monopoly on the means of communication Central direction and control of the economy through state planning In the book titled Democracy and Totalitarianism 1968 French analyst Raymond Aron outlined five criteria for a regime to be considered as totalitarian 52 A one party state where one party has a monopoly on all political activity A state ideology upheld by the ruling party that is given status as the only authority State information monopoly that controls mass media for distribution of official truth State controlled economy with major economic entities under the control of the state Ideological terror that turns economic or professional actions into crimes Violators are exposed to prosecution and to ideological persecution Under the dictatorships of Hafez al Assad left and his son Bashar al Assad right Ba thist Syria has been ruled by one of the few surviving cold war era totalitarian regimes to the present day 53 54 55 According to this view totalitarian regimes in Germany Italy and the Soviet Union had initial origins in the chaos that followed in the wake of World War I and allowed totalitarian movements to seize control of the government while the sophistication of modern weapons and communications enabled them to effectively establish what Friedrich and Brzezinski called a totalitarian dictatorship 56 Some social scientists have criticized Friedrich and Brzezinski s totalitarian approach commenting that the Soviet system both as a political and as a social entity was in fact better understood in terms of interest groups competing elites or even in class terms using the concept of the nomenklatura as a vehicle for a new ruling class new class These critics posit that there is evidence of the widespread dispersion of power at least in the implementation of policy among sectoral and regional authorities For some followers of this pluralist approach this was evidence of the ability of the regime to adapt to include new demands however proponents of the totalitarian model stated that the failure of the system to survive showed not only its inability to adapt but the mere formality of supposed popular participation 57 German historian Karl Dietrich Bracher whose work is primarily concerned with Nazi Germany posited that the totalitarian typology as developed by Friedrich and Brzezinski is an excessively inflexible model and failed to consider the revolutionary dynamic that for Bracher is at the heart of totalitarianism 58 Bracher posited that the essence of totalitarianism is the total claim to control and remake all aspects of society combined with an all embracing ideology the value on authoritarian leadership and the pretence of the common identity of state and society which distinguished the totalitarian closed understanding of politics from the open democratic understanding 58 Unlike the Friedrich and Brzezinski definition Bracher said that totalitarian regimes did not require a single leader and could function with a collective leadership which led the American historian Walter Laqueur to posit that Bracher s definition seemed to fit reality better than the Friedrich Brzezinski definition 59 Bracher s typologies came under attack from Werner Conze and other historians who felt that Bracher lost sight of the historical material and used universal ahistorical concepts 60 In his 1951 book The True Believer Eric Hoffer posited that mass movements such as fascism Nazism and Stalinism had a common trait in picturing Western democracies and their values as decadent with people too soft too pleasure loving and too selfish to sacrifice for a higher cause which for them implies an inner moral and biological decay Hoffer added that those movements offered the prospect of a glorious future to frustrated people enabling them to find a refuge from the lack of personal accomplishments in their individual existence The individual is then assimilated into a compact collective body and fact proof screens from reality are established 61 This stance may be connected to a religious fear for Communists Paul Hanebrink has posited that many European Christians started to fear Communist regimes after the rise of Hitler commenting For many European Christians Catholic and Protestant alike the new postwar culture war crystallized as a struggle against communism Across interwar Europe Christians demonized the Communist regime in Russia as the apotheosis of secular materialism and a militarized threat to Christian social and moral order 62 For Hanebrink Christians saw Communist regimes as a threat to their moral order and hoped to lead European nations back to their Christian roots by creating an anti totalitarian census which defined Europe in the early Cold War 63 Post Cold War Edit President Isaias Afwerki right has ruled Eritrea as a totalitarian dictator since the country s independence in 1993 64 Laure Neumayer posited that despite the disputes over its heuristic value and its normative assumptions the concept of totalitarianism made a vigorous return to the political and academic fields at the end of the Cold War 65 In the 1990s Francois Furet made a comparative analysis 66 and used the term totalitarian twins to link Nazism and Stalinism 67 68 69 Eric Hobsbawm criticized Furet for his temptation to stress the existence of a common ground between two systems with different ideological roots 70 In Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism Five Interventions in the Mis Use of a Notion Zizek wrote that t he liberating effect of General Augusto Pinochet s arrest was exceptional as the fear of Pinochet dissipated the spell was broken the taboo subjects of torture and disappearances became the daily grist of the news media the people no longer just whispered but openly spoke about prosecuting him in Chile itself 71 Saladdin Ahmed cited Hannah Arendt as stating that the Soviet Union can no longer be called totalitarian in the strict sense of the term after Stalin s death writing that this was the case in General August Pinochet s Chile yet it would be absurd to exempt it from the class of totalitarian regimes for that reason alone Saladdin posited that while Chile under Pinochet had no official ideology there was one man who ruled Chile from behind the scenes none other than Milton Friedman the godfather of neoliberalism and the most influential teacher of the Chicago Boys was Pinochet s adviser In this sense Saladdin criticized the totalitarian concept because it was only being applied to opposing ideologies and it was not being applied to liberalism 36 In the early 2010s Richard Shorten Vladimir Tismăneanu and Aviezer Tucker posited that totalitarian ideologies can take different forms in different political systems but all of them focus on utopianism scientism or political violence They posit that Nazism and Stalinism both emphasized the role of specialization in modern societies and they also saw polymathy as a thing of the past and they also stated that their claims were supported by statistics and science which led them to impose strict ethical regulations on culture use psychological violence and persecute entire groups 72 73 74 Their arguments have been criticized by other scholars due to their partiality and anachronism Juan Francisco Fuentes treats totalitarianism as an invented tradition and he believes that the notion of modern despotism is a reverse anachronism for Fuentes the anachronistic use of totalitarian totalitarianism involves the will to reshape the past in the image and likeness of the present 75 Kim Il Sung was a totalitarian leader and founder of North Korea 76 Other studies try to link modern technological changes to totalitarianism According to Shoshana Zuboff the economic pressures of modern surveillance capitalism are driving the intensification of connection and monitoring online with spaces of social life becoming open to saturation by corporate actors directed at the making of profit and or the regulation of action 77 Toby Ord believed that Orwell s fears of totalitarianism constituted a notable early precursor to modern notions of anthropogenic existential risk the concept that a future catastrophe could permanently destroy the potential of Earth originating intelligent life due in part to technological changes creating a permanent technological dystopia Ord said that Orwell s writings show that his concern was genuine rather than just a throwaway part of the fictional plot of Nineteen Eighty Four In 1949 Orwell wrote that a ruling class which could guard against four previously enumerated sources of risk would remain in power permanently 78 That same year Bertrand Russell wrote that modern techniques have made possible a new intensity of governmental control and this possibility has been exploited very fully in totalitarian states 79 In the late 2010s The Economist has described China s developed Social Credit System under Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping s administration to screen and rank its citizens based on their personal behavior as totalitarian 80 Opponents of China s ranking system say that it is intrusive and it is just another tool which a one party state can use to control the population The New York Times compared Chinese paramount leader Xi Jinping s cult of personality and his ideology Xi Jinping Thought to that of Mao Zedong during the Cold War 81 Supporters say that it will transform China into a more civilized and law abiding society 82 Shoshana Zuboff considers it instrumentarian rather than totalitarian 83 Other emerging technologies that could empower future totalitarian regimes include brain reading contact tracing and various applications of artificial intelligence 84 85 86 87 Philosopher Nick Bostrom said that there is a possible trade off namely that some existential risks might be mitigated by the establishment of a powerful and permanent world government and in turn the establishment of such a government could enhance the existential risks which are associated with the rule of a permanent dictatorship 88 Religious totalitarianism Edit Flag of the Taliban The Taliban is a totalitarian Sunni Islamist militant group and political movement in Afghanistan that emerged in the aftermath of the Soviet Afghan War and the end of the Cold War It governed most of Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001 and won full control of Afghanistan in 2021 Features of its totalitarian governance include the imposition of Pashtunwali culture of the plurality Pashtun ethnic group as religious law the exclusion of minorities and non Taliban members from the government and extensive violations of women s rights 89 Abu Bakr al Baghdadi self proclaimed Caliph of the Islamic State ruled as the dictator of a totalitarian quasi state that controlled parts of Iraq and Syria from 2014 to 2019 The Islamic State is a Salafi Jihadist terrorist group founded by Abu Musab al Zarqawi in 1999 which espouses a totalitarian ideology that is a fundamentalist hybrid of Global Jihadism Wahhabism and Qutbism In 2014 the group declared itself as a caliphate a that sought world domination and established what has been described as a political religious totalitarian regime The quasi state held significant territory in Iraq and Syria during the course of the War in Iraq and the Syrian civil war from 2013 to 2019 under the dictatorship of its first Caliph Abu Bakr al Baghdadi who imposed an extreme form of Sharia law 93 94 95 96 The city of Geneva under John Calvin s leadership has been characterized as totalitarian by scholars 97 98 99 Views on totalitarianism by historians of the Soviet Union since the 1970s EditSome recent historians of the Soviet Union now consider the concept of totalitarianism to be an oversimplification that does not accurately reflect the reality of life in the Soviet Union The idea was first challenged by a generation of historians who came to prominence in the 1970s and whose perspectives came to be known as the revisionist school Some of whose more prominent members were Sheila Fitzpatrick J Arch Getty Jerry F Hough William McCagg and Robert W Thurston 100 Although their individual interpretations differ the revisionists say that the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin was in many ways institutionally weak and that terror reflected the weaknesses rather than the strengths of the Soviet state 100 They argue that Soviet citizens were not totally devoid of agency or resources and atomised by ideology as the totalitarian perspective implies Rather they successfully developed practices that helped them to navigate everyday life at a time of considerable danger and multiple shortages 101 For example Arch Getty claims that the Soviet political system was chaotic that institutions often escaped the control of the centre and that Stalin s leadership consisted to a considerable extent in responding on an ad hoc basis to political crises as they arose 102 In addition scholars such as Fitzpatrick have stressed that the regime relied on the popular support for legitimation as much as it did on terror By purging society of groups deemed anti Soviet new job opportunities opened up for an entire cohort of young working class citizens who saw dramatic upward social mobility that they could scarcely have dreamed of before the revolution These beneficiaries of the violence became fiercely loyal to Stalin and the Soviet regime To them it appeared the promise of the revolution had been fulfilled They became willing to defend and support Stalin not in spite of terror but because of it 103 In the case of East Germany Eli Rubin posited that East Germany was not a totalitarian state but rather a society shaped by the confluence of unique economic and political circumstances interacting with the concerns of ordinary citizens 104 Writing in 1987 Walter Laqueur posited that the revisionists in the field of Soviet history were guilty of confusing popularity with morality and of making highly embarrassing and not very convincing arguments against the concept of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian state 105 Laqueur stated that the revisionists arguments with regard to Soviet history were highly similar to the arguments made by Ernst Nolte regarding German history 105 For Laqueur concepts such as modernization were inadequate tools for explaining Soviet history while totalitarianism was not 106 Laqueur s argument has been criticized by modern revisionist school historians such as Paul Buhle who said that Laqueur wrongly equates Cold War revisionism with the German revisionism the latter reflected a revanchist military minded conservative nationalism 107 Moreover Michael Parenti and James Petras have suggested that the totalitarianism concept has been politically employed and used for anti communist purposes Parenti has also analysed how left anti communism attacked the Soviet Union during the Cold War 108 For Petras the CIA funded the Congress for Cultural Freedom in order to attack Stalinist anti totalitarianism 109 Into the 21st century Enzo Traverso has attacked the creators of the concept of totalitarianism as having invented it to designate the enemies of the West 110 According to some scholars calling Joseph Stalin totalitarian instead of authoritarian has been asserted to be a high sounding but specious excuse for Western self interest just as surely as the counterclaim that allegedly debunking the totalitarian concept may be a high sounding but specious excuse for Russian self interest For Domenico Losurdo totalitarianism is a polysemic concept with origins in Christian theology and applying it to the political sphere requires an operation of abstract schematism which makes use of isolated elements of historical reality to place fascist regimes and the Soviet Union in the dock together serving the anti communism of Cold War era intellectuals rather than reflecting intellectual research 111 Other scholars among them F William Engdahl Sheldon Wolin and Slavoj Zizek have linked totalitarianism to capitalism and liberalism and used concepts such as inverted totalitarianism 112 totalitarian capitalism 113 and totalitarian democracy 114 115 116 See also EditComparison of Nazism and Stalinism Criticism of communist party rule Democratic backsliding List of authoritarian states List of cults of personality List of totalitarian regimes Totalitarian architectureReferences Edit a b Conquest Robert 1999 Reflections on a Ravaged Century p 74 ISBN 0393048187 Popper Karl 2013 Gombrich E H ed The Open Society and Its Enemies Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691158136 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2021 Wild John 1964 Plato s Modern Enemies and the Theory of Natural Law Chicago University of Chicago Press p 23 Popper is committing a serious historical error in attributing the organic theory of the state to Plato and accusing him of all the fallacies of post Hegelian and Marxist historicism the theory that history is controlled by the inexorable laws governing the behaviour of superindividual social entities of which human beings and their free choices are merely subordinate manifestations Levinson Ronald B 1970 In Defense of Plato New York Russell and Russell p 20 In spite of the high rating one must accord his initial intention of fairness his hatred for the enemies of the open society his zeal to destroy whatever seems to him destructive of the welfare of mankind has led him into the extensive use of what may be called terminological 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Colonialism The Destruction of Civilization Since 1914 Routledge ISBN 9781351471701 Archived from the original on May 1 2022 Retrieved April 18 2022 via Google Books Wallech Steven Daryaee Touraj Hendricks Craig Negus Anne Lynne Wan Peter P Bakken Gordon Morris January 22 2013 World History A Concise Thematic Analysis Volume 2 John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118532737 Archived from the original on April 17 2022 Retrieved April 17 2022 via Google Books Delzell Charles F Spring 1988 Remembering Mussolini The Wilson Quarterly Washington D C Wilson Quarterly 12 2 127 JSTOR 40257305 Archived from the original on 2022 05 13 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Retrieved April 8 2022 Schmitt Carl 1927 University of Chicago Press ed Der Begriff des Politischen The Concept of the Political in German 1996 ed Rutgers University Press p 22 ISBN 0226738868 a b Siegel Achim 1998 The Totalitarian Paradigm After the End of Communism Towards a Theoretical Reassessment hardback ed Amsterdam Rodopi p 200 ISBN 978 9042005525 Concepts of totalitarianism became most widespread at the height of the Cold War Since the late 1940s especially since the Korean War they were condensed into a far reaching even hegemonic ideology by which the political elites of the Western world tried to explain and even to justify the Cold War constellation a b Guilhot Nicholas 2005 The Democracy Makers Human Rights and International Order hardcover ed New York City New York Columbia University Press p 33 ISBN 978 0231131247 The opposition between the West and Soviet totalitarianism was often presented as an opposition both moral and epistemological between truth and falsehood The democratic social and economic credentials of the Soviet Union were typically seen as lies and as the product of deliberate and multiform propaganda In this context the concept of totalitarianism was itself an asset As it made possible the conversion of prewar anti fascism into postwar anti communism a b Reisch George A 2005 How the Cold War Transformed Philosophy of Science To the Icy Slopes of Logic Cambridge University Press pp 153 154 ISBN 978 0521546898 a b Defty Brook 2007 2 Launching the New Propaganda Policy 1948 3 Building a Concerted Counter offensive Co operation with other powers 4 Close and Continuous Liaison British and American co operation 1950 51 5 A Global Propaganda Offensive Churchill and the revival of political warfare Britain America and Anti Communist Propaganda 1945 1953 The Information Research Department 1st paperback ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0714683614 a b Caute David 2010 Politics and the Novel during the Cold War Transaction Publishers pp 95 99 ISBN 978 1412831369 Archived from the original on 2021 04 14 Retrieved 2020 11 22 a b c d e Cinpoes Radu 2010 Nationalism and Identity in Romania A History of Extreme Politics from the Birth of the State to EU Accession London Oxford New York New Delhi and Sydney Bloomsbury p 70 ISBN 978 1848851665 a b c d Pipes Richard 1995 Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime New York Vintage Books Random House p 243 ISBN 0394502426 Juan Jose Linz 2000 Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes Lynne Rienner Publisher p 143 ISBN 978 1 55587 890 0 OCLC 1172052725 Jonathan Michie ed 3 February 2014 Reader s Guide to the Social Sciences Routledge p 95 ISBN 978 1 135 93226 8 Davies Sarah Harris James 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 3 ISBN 978 1139446631 Academic Sovietology a child of the early Cold War was dominated by the totalitarian model of Soviet politics Until the 1960s it was almost impossible to advance any other interpretation in the USA at least Davies Sarah Harris James 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 3 4 ISBN 978 1139446631 In 1953 Carl Friedrich characterised totalitarian systems in terms of five points an official ideology control of weapons and of media use of terror and a single mass party usually under a single leader There was of course an assumption that the leader was critical to the workings of totalitarianism at the apex of a monolithic centralised and hierarchical system it was he who issued the orders which were fulfilled unquestioningly by his subordinates a b Davies Sarah Harris James 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1139446631 Tucker s work stressed the absolute nature of Stalin s power an assumption which was increasingly challenged by later revisionist historians In his Origins of the Great Purges Arch Getty argued that the Soviet political system was chaotic that institutions often escaped the control of the centre and that Stalin s leadership consisted to a considerable extent in responding on an ad hoc basis to political crises as they arose Getty s work was influenced by political science of the 1960s onwards which in a critique of the totalitarian model began to consider the possibility that relatively autonomous bureaucratic institutions might have had some influence on policy making at the highest level Lenoe Matt June 2002 Did Stalin Kill Kirov and Does It Matter The Journal of Modern History 74 2 352 380 doi 10 1086 343411 ISSN 0022 2801 S2CID 142829949 a b Zimmerman William September 1980 Review How the Soviet Union is Governed Slavic Review Cambridge University Press 39 3 482 486 doi 10 2307 2497167 JSTOR 2497167 Fitzpatrick Sheila November 2007 Revisionism in Soviet History History and Theory 46 4 77 91 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2303 2007 00429 x ISSN 1468 2303 the Western scholars who in the 1990s and 2000s were most active in scouring the new archives for data on Soviet repression were revisionists always archive rats such as Arch Getty and Lynne Viola a b c d Haynes John Earl Klehr Harvey 2003 Revising History In Denial Historians Communism and Espionage San Francisco Encounter pp 11 57 ISBN 1893554724 Markowitz Norman a b Saladdin Ahmed 2019 Totalitarian Space and the Destruction of Aura Albany SUNY Press p 7 ISBN 978 1438472935 a b Connelly John 2010 Totalitarianism Defunct Theory Useful Word Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 11 4 819 835 doi 10 1353 kri 2010 0001 S2CID 143510612 Payne Stanley G 1980 Fascism Comparison and Definition University of Washington Press p 73 ISBN 978 0299080600 Gentile Giovanni Mussolini Benito 1932 La dottrina del fascismo The doctrine of fascism Conquest Robert 1990 The Great Terror A Reassessment Oxford University Press p 249 ISBN 0195071328 Nemoianu Virgil December 1982 Review of End and Beginnings Modern Language Notes 97 5 1235 1238 Churchill Winston 5 October 1938 The Munich Agreement Speech House of Commons of the United Kingdom International Churchill Society Archived from the original on 26 June 2020 Retrieved 7 August 2020 We in this country as in other Liberal and democratic countries have a perfect right to exalt the principle of self determination but it comes ill out of the mouths of those in totalitarian states who deny even the smallest element of toleration to every section and creed within their bounds Many of those countries in fear of the rise of the Nazi power loathed the idea of having this arbitrary rule of the totalitarian system thrust upon them and hoped that a stand would be made Churchill Winston 16 October 1938 Broadcast to the United States and to London Speech International Churchill Society Archived from the original on 25 September 2020 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Mann Michael 2004 Fascists New York Cambridge University Press p 331 ISBN 978 0521831314 Archived from the original on 2020 08 19 Retrieved 2017 10 26 Preston Paul 2007 The Spanish Civil War Reaction Revolution and Revenge 3rd ed New York W W Norton amp Company p 64 ISBN 978 0393329872 Salvado Francisco J Romero 2013 Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War Scarecrow Press p 149 ISBN 978 0810880092 Archived from the original on 2020 08 19 Retrieved 2019 04 27 Orwell George 1946 Why I Write Gangrel Archived from the original on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Laqueur Walter 1987 The Fate of the Revolution New York Scribner p 131 ISBN 0684189038 Villa Dana Richard 2000 The Cambridge Companion to Hannah Arendt Cambridge University Press pp 2 3 ISBN 0521645719 Brzezinski Zbigniew Friedrich Carl 1956 Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674332607 Brzezinski amp Friedrich 1956 p 22 Aron Raymond 1968 Democracy and Totalitarianism Littlehampton Book Services p 195 ISBN 978 0297002529 Khamis B Gold Vaughn Sahar Paul Katherine 2013 22 Propaganda in Egypt and Syria s Cyberwars Contexts Actors Tools and Tactics In Auerbach Castronovo Jonathan Russ ed The Oxford Handbook of Propaganda Studies 198 Madison Avenue New York NY 10016 Oxford University Press p 422 ISBN 978 0 19 976441 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wedeen Lisa 2015 Ambiguities of Domination Politics Rhetoric and Symbols in Contemporary Syria Chicago University of Chicago Press doi 10 7208 chicago 978022345536 001 0001 inactive 5 January 2023 ISBN 978 0 226 33337 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2023 link Meininghaus Esther 2016 Creating Consent in Ba thist Syria Women and Welfare in a Totalitarian State I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78453 115 7 Brzezinski amp Friedrich 1956 p 22 Laqueur Walter 1987 The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present New York Scribner s pp 186 189 233 234 ISBN 978 0684189031 a b Kershaw Ian 2000 The Nazi Dictatorship Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation London New York Arnold Oxford University Press p 25 ISBN 978 0340760284 OCLC 43419425 Laqueur Walter 1987 The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present New York Scribner s p 241 ISBN 978 0684189031 Conze Werner 1977 Die deutsche Geschichtswissenschaft seit 1945 Bedingungen und Ergebnisse German history since 1945 conditions and results Historische Zeitschrift 225 JG 1 28 doi 10 1524 hzhz 1977 225 jg 1 S2CID 164328961 Hoffer Eric 2002 The True Believer Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements Harper Perennial Modern Classics pp 61 163 ISBN 0060505915 Hanebrink Paul July 2018 European Protestants Between Anti Communism and Anti Totalitarianism The Other Interwar Kulturkampf Journal of Contemporary History 53 3 624 doi 10 1177 0022009417704894 S2CID 158028188 Hanebrink Paul July 2018 European Protestants Between Anti Communism and Anti Totalitarianism The Other Interwar Kulturkampf Journal of Contemporary History 53 3 622 643 doi 10 1177 0022009417704894 S2CID 158028188 Saad Asma 21 February 2018 Eritrea s Silent Totalitarianism McGill Journal of Political Studies 21 Archived from the original on 7 October 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Neumayer Laure 2018 The Criminalisation of Communism in the European Political Space after the Cold War Routledge ISBN 9781351141741 Schonpflug Daniel 2007 Histoires croisees Francois Furet Ernst Nolte and a Comparative History of Totalitarian Movements European History Quarterly 37 2 265 290 doi 10 1177 0265691407075595 S2CID 143074271 Singer Daniel 17 April 1995 The Sound and the Furet The Nation Archived from the original on 17 March 2008 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Furet borrowing from Hannah Arendt describes Bolsheviks and Nazis as totalitarian twins conflicting yet united Singer Daniel 2 November 1999 Exploiting a Tragedy or Le Rouge en Noir The Nation Archived from the original on 26 July 2019 Retrieved 7 August 2020 the totalitarian nature of Stalin s Russia is undeniable Grobman Gary M 1990 Nazi Fascism and the Modern Totalitarian State Remember org Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 7 August 2020 The government of Nazi Germany was a fascist totalitarian state Hobsbawm Eric 2012 Revolutionaries History and Illusion Abacus ISBN 978 0349120560 Zizek Slavoj 2002 Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism Five Interventions in the Mis Use of a Notion London and New York Verso p 169 ISBN 9781859844250 Shorten Richard 2012 Modernism and Totalitarianism Rethinking the Intellectual Sources of Nazism and Stalinism 1945 to the Present Palgrave ISBN 978 0230252073 Tismăneanu Vladimir 2012 The Devil in History Communism Fascism and Some Lessons of the Twentieth Century University of California Press ISBN 978 0520954175 Tucker Aviezer 2015 The Legacies of Totalitarianism A Theoretical Framework Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1316393055 Fuentes Juan Francisco 2015 How Words Reshape the Past The Old Old Story of Totalitarianism Politics Religion amp Ideology 16 2 3 282 297 doi 10 1080 21567689 2015 1084928 S2CID 155157905 Suh J J 2012 Origins of North Korea s Juche Colonialism War and Development Lexington Books p 149 ISBN 978 0 7391 7659 7 Retrieved 2023 02 05 Zuboff Shoshana 2019 The Age of Surveillance Capitalism The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power New York PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1610395694 OCLC 1049577294 Ord Toby 2020 Future Risks The Precipice Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1526600196 Clarke R 1988 Information Technology and Dataveillance Communications of the ACM 31 5 498 512 doi 10 1145 42411 42413 S2CID 6826824 China invents the digital totalitarian state The Economist 17 December 2017 Archived from the original on 14 September 2018 Retrieved 14 September 2018 Buckley Chris 24 October 2017 China Enshrines Xi Jinping Thought Elevating Leader to Mao Like Status The New York Times Archived from the original on 22 November 2017 Retrieved 23 January 2020 Leigh Karen Lee Dandan 2 December 2018 China s Radical Plan to Judge Each Citizen s Behavior The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2 January 2019 Retrieved 23 January 2020 Lucas Rob January February 2020 The Surveillance Business New Left Review 121 Archived from the original on 21 June 2020 Retrieved 23 March 2020 Brennan Marquez K 2012 A Modest Defence of Mind Reading Yale Journal of Law and Technology 15 214 Archived from the original on 2020 08 10 Pickett K 16 April 2020 Totalitarianism Congressman calls method to track coronavirus cases an invasion of privacy Washington Examiner Archived from the original on 22 April 2020 Retrieved 23 April 2020 Helbing Dirk Frey Bruno S Gigerenzer Gerd Hafen Ernst Hagner Michael Hofstetter Yvonne van den Hoven Jeroen Zicari Roberto V Zwitter Andrej 2019 Will Democracy Survive Big Data and Artificial Intelligence PDF Towards Digital Enlightenment 73 98 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 90869 4 7 ISBN 978 3 319 90868 7 S2CID 46925747 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 05 26 also published in Helbing D Frey B S Gigerenzer G et al 2019 Will democracy survive big data and artificial intelligence Towards Digital Enlightenment Essays on the Dark and Light Sides of the Digital Revolution Springer Cham pp 73 98 ISBN 978 3319908694 Turchin Alexey Denkenberger David 3 May 2018 Classification of global catastrophic risks connected with artificial intelligence AI amp Society 35 1 147 163 doi 10 1007 s00146 018 0845 5 S2CID 19208453 Bostrom Nick February 2013 Existential Risk Prevention as Global Priority Global Policy 4 1 15 31 doi 10 1111 1758 5899 12002 Sakhi Nilofar December 2022 The Taliban Takeover in Afghanistan and Security Paradox Journal of Asian Security and International Affairs 9 3 383 401 doi 10 1177 23477970221130882 S2CID 253945821 Afghanistan is now controlled by a militant group that operates out of a totalitarian ideology Madadi Sayed 6 September 2022 Dysfunctional centralization and growing fragility under Taliban rule Middle East Institute Retrieved 28 November 2022 In other words the centralized political and governance institutions of the former republic were unaccountable enough that they now comfortably accommodate the totalitarian objectives of the Taliban without giving the people any chance to resist peacefully Sadr Omar 23 March 2022 Afghanistan s Public Intellectuals Fail to Denounce the Taliban Fair Observer Retrieved 28 November 2022 The Taliban government currently installed in Afghanistan is not simply another dictatorship By all standards it is a totalitarian regime Dismantlement of the Taliban regime is the only way forward for Afghanistan Atlantic Council 8 September 2022 Retrieved 28 November 2022 As with any other ideological movement the Taliban s Islamic government is transformative and totalitarian in nature Akbari Farkhondeh 7 March 2022 The Risks Facing Hazaras in Taliban ruled Afghanistan George Washington University Retrieved 28 November 2022 In the Taliban s totalitarian Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan there is no meaningful political inclusivity or representation for Hazaras at any level Yusuf al Qaradawi stated The declaration issued by the Islamic State is void under sharia and has dangerous consequences for the Sunnis in Iraq and for the revolt in Syria adding that the title of caliph can only be given by the entire Muslim nation not by a single group gt Strange Hannah 5 July 2014 Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi addresses Muslims in Mosul The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 6 July 2014 Bunzel Cole Caliph Incognito The Ridicule of Abu Ibrahim al Hashimi www jihadica com Archived from the original on 2 January 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2020 Hamid Shadi 1 November 2016 What a caliphate really is and how the Islamic State is not one Brookings Archived from the original on 1 April 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2020 Winter Charlie 27 March 2016 Totalitarianism 101 The Islamic State s Offline Propaganda Strategy Filipec Ondrej 2020 The Islamic State From Terrorism to Totalitarian Insurgency Routledge ISBN 9780367457631 Peter Bernholz February 2019 Supreme Values Totalitarianism and Terrorism The Oxford Handbook of Public Choice Vol 1 Haslett Allison 2021 The Islamic State A Political Religious Totalitarian Regime Scientia et Humanitas A Journal of Student Research Middle Tennessee State University Islamic State embraces the most violent extreme traits of Jihadi Salafism the State merged religious dogma and state control together to create a political religious totalitarian regime that was not bound by physical borders Bernholz P 2017 Totalitarianism Terrorism and Supreme Values History and Theory Studies in Public Choice Springer International Publishing p 33 ISBN 978 3 319 56907 9 Retrieved 2023 02 28 Congleton R D Grofman B N Voigt S 2018 The Oxford Handbook of Public Choice Volume 1 Oxford Handbooks Oxford University Press p 860 ISBN 978 0 19 046974 0 Retrieved 2023 02 28 Maier H Schafer M 2007 Totalitarianism and Political Religions Volume II Concepts for the Comparison Of Dictatorships Totalitarianism Movements and Political Religions Taylor amp Francis p 264 ISBN 978 1 134 06346 8 Retrieved 2023 02 28 a b Laqueur Walter 1987 The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present New York Scribner s pp 225 227 ISBN 978 0684189031 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1999 Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Soviet Russia in the 1930s New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195050004 Davies Sarah Harris James 8 September 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge University Press p 4 5 ISBN 978 1 139 44663 1 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1999 Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Soviet Russia in the 1930s New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195050004 Rubin Eli 2008 Synthetic Socialism Plastics amp Dictatorship in the German Democratic Republic Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1469606774 a b Laqueur Walter 1987 The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present New York Scribner s p 228 ISBN 978 0684189031 Laqueur Walter 1987 The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present New York Scribner s p 233 ISBN 978 0684189031 Buhle Paul Rice Maximin Edward Francis 1995 William Appleman Williams The Tragedy of Empire Psychology Press p 192 ISBN 0349120560 Parenti Michael 1997 Blackshirts and Reds Rational Fascism and the Overthrow of Communism San Francisco City Lights Books pp 41 58 ISBN 978 0872863293 Petras James November 1 1999 The CIA and the Cultural Cold War Revisited Monthly Review 51 6 47 doi 10 14452 MR 051 06 1999 10 4 Archived from the original on May 16 2021 Retrieved June 19 2021 Traverso Enzo 2001 Le Totalitarisme Le XXe siecle en debat Totalitarianism The 20th Century in Debate in French Poche ISBN 978 2020378574 Losurdo Domenico January 2004 Towards a Critique of the Category of Totalitarianism Historical Materialism 12 2 25 55 doi 10 1163 1569206041551663 Hedges Chris Sacco Joe 2012 Days of Destruction Days of Revolt Nation Books ISBN 978 1568586434 Liodakis George 2010 Totalitarian Capitalism and Beyond Routledge ISBN 978 0754675570 Zizek Slavoj 2002 Welcome to the Desert of the Real London and New York Verso ISBN 978 1859844212 Engdahl F William 2009 Full Spectrum Dominance Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order Boxboro Massachusetts Third Millennium Press ISBN 978 0979560866 Wolin Sheldon S 2010 Democracy Incorporated Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691145891 Further reading EditArendt Hannah The Origins of Totalitarianism New York Schocken Books 1958 new ed 1966 online Armstrong John A The Politics of Totalitarianism New York Random House 1961 Beja Jean Philippe March 2019 Xi Jinping s China On the Road to Neo totalitarianism Social Research An International Quarterly 86 1 203 230 doi 10 1353 sor 2019 0009 S2CID 199140716 ProQuest 2249726077 Archived from the original on December 3 2022 Bernholz Peter Ideocracy and totalitarianism A formal analysis incorporating ideology Public Choice 108 2001 pp 33 75 Bernholz Peter Ideology sects state and totalitarianism A general theory In H Maier and M Schaefer eds Totalitarianism and Political Religions Vol II Routledge 2007 pp 246 270 Borkenau Franz The Totalitarian Enemy London Faber and Faber 1940 Bracher Karl Dietrich The Disputed Concept of Totalitarianism pp 11 33 from Totalitarianism Reconsidered edited by Ernest A Menze Kennikat Press 1981 ISBN 0804692688 Congleton Roger D Governance by true believers Supreme duties with and without totalitarianism Constitutional Political Economy 31 1 2020 111 141 online Connelly John Totalitarianism Defunct Theory Useful Word Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 11 4 2010 819 835 online Curtis Michael Totalitarianism 1979 online Devlin Nicholas Hannah Arendt and Marxist Theories of Totalitarianism Modern Intellectual History 2021 1 23 online Diamond Larry The road to digital unfreedom The threat of postmodern totalitarianism Journal of Democracy 30 1 2019 20 24 excerpt Fitzpatrick Sheila and Michael Geyer eds Beyond Totalitarianism Stalinism and Nazism Compared Cambridge University Press 2008 Friedrich Carl and Z K Brzezinski Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy Harvard University Press 1st ed 1956 2nd ed 1967 Gach Nataliia From totalitarianism to democracy Building learner autonomy in Ukrainian higher education Issues in Educational Research 30 2 2020 532 554 online Gleason Abbott Totalitarianism The Inner History Of The Cold War New York Oxford University Press 1995 ISBN 0195050177 Gregor A Totalitarianism and political religion Stanford University Press 2020 Hanebrink Paul European Protestants Between Anti Communism and Anti Totalitarianism The Other Interwar Kulturkampf Journal of Contemporary History July 2018 Vol 53 Issue 3 pp 622 643 Hermet Guy with Pierre Hassner and Jacques Rupnik Totalitarismes Paris Editions Economica 1984 Jainchill Andrew and Samuel Moyn French democracy between totalitarianism and solidarity Pierre Rosanvallon and revisionist historiography Journal of Modern History 76 1 2004 107 154 online Joscelyne Sophie Norman Mailer and American Totalitarianism in the 1960s Modern Intellectual History 19 1 2022 241 267 online Keller Marcello Sorce Why is Music so Ideological Why Do Totalitarian States Take It So Seriously Journal of Musicological Research XXVI 2007 no 2 3 pp 91 122 Kirkpatrick Jeane Dictatorships and Double Standards Rationalism and reason in politics London Simon amp Schuster 1982 Laqueur Walter The Fate of the Revolution Interpretations of Soviet History From 1917 to the Present London Collier Books 1987 ISBN 002034080X Menze Ernest ed Totalitarianism reconsidered 1981 online essays by experts Ludwig von Mises Omnipotent Government The Rise of the Total State and Total War Yale University Press 1944 Murray Ewan Shut Up Tale of Totalitarianism 2005 Nicholls A J Historians and Totalitarianism The Impact of German Unification Journal of Contemporary History 36 4 2001 653 661 Patrikeeff Felix Stalinism Totalitarian Society and the Politics of Perfect Control Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions Summer 2003 Vol 4 Issue 1 pp 23 46 Payne Stanley G A History of Fascism London Routledge 1996 Rak Joanna and Roman Backer Theory behind Russian Quest for Totalitarianism Analysis of Discursive Swing in Putin s Speeches Communist and Post Communist Studies 53 1 2020 13 26 online Roberts David D Totalitarianism John Wiley amp Sons 2020 Rocker Rudolf Nationalism and Culture Covici Friede 1937 Sartori Giovanni The Theory of Democracy Revisited Chatham N J Chatham House 1987 Sauer Wolfgang National Socialism totalitarianism or fascism American Historical Review Volume 73 Issue 2 December 1967 404 424 online Saxonberg Steven Pre modernity totalitarianism and the non banality of evil A comparison of Germany Spain Sweden and France Springer Nature 2019 Schapiro Leonard Totalitarianism London The Pall Mall Press 1972 Selinger William The politics of Arendtian historiography European federation and the origins of totalitarianism Modern Intellectual History 13 2 2016 417 446 Skotheim Robert Allen Totalitarianism and American social thought 1971 online Talmon J L The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy London Seeker amp Warburg 1952 Traverso Enzo Le Totalitarisme Le XXe siecle en debat Paris Poche 2001 Tuori Kaius Narratives and Normativity Totalitarianism and Narrative Change in the European Legal Tradition after World War II Law and History Review 37 2 2019 605 638 online Zizek Slavoj Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism London Verso 2001 onlineExternal links Edit Look up totalitarianism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Totalitarianism Totalitarianism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Notes Edit Caliphate claim of Islamic State group is disputed and declared as illegal by traditional Islamic scholarship 90 91 92 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Totalitarianism amp oldid 1154787355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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