6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265e5e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Women's history and gender history: The Italian experience

Giovanna Fiume

subject

Cultural StudiesHistoryHegemonySociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesOpposition (politics)06 humanities and the artsConstitutional monarchy0506 political science060104 historyPoliticsAnthropologyLawPolitical economy050602 political science & public administrationPolitical culture0601 history and archaeologyIdeologySociologyGender historyLegitimacymedia_common

description

SummarySince the early nineteenth century political opposition became a central concept of political representation in constitutional monarchies. While this concept marked the political language of unified Italy on the national level, in local administration the legitimacy of political opposition remained an issue of dispute, as illustrated in this analysis of the political language in Bologna's city council. Local perceptions of national events, like Garibaldi's unsuccessful Mentana-campaign, assumed a significant symbolic meaning and challenged traditional understandings of local administration by introducing notions of political opposition. In Bologna, the second city of the former Papal State, the Moderates were able to form a political hegemony after the Unification of Italy and remained the predominant political force also after the parliamentary revolution of 1876 and the electoral reforms of the 1880s. Due to its limited influence on the local administration, Bologna's Left defined its ideological profile earlier and more clearly than the Left in other parts of Italy and integrated issues of national importance into local political discourse. Illustrating the relationship between central administration and the periphery, the article analyses the development of political language and changing meanings of political representation on the local level between Unification and World War One.

10.1080/13532940500284291http://hdl.handle.net/10447/23728