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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Staging Death: Christofascist Necropolitics during the National Legionary State in Romania, 1940–1941

Mihai Stelian Rusu

subject

HistoryHistoryPraxismedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesGeography Planning and Development06 humanities and the artsAncient historyCeremony0506 political scienceNationalism060104 historyPoliticsState (polity)Political Science and International Relations050602 political science & public administration0601 history and archaeologyAfterlifeIdeologyCultmedia_common

description

AbstractThe cult of death and the celebration of martyrdom lay at the core of interwar fascist movements across the European continent. However, it was in the Romanian Legionary Movement (also known as the Iron Guard) that these were articulated into a full-fledged ideology of thanatic ultranationalism. In this article, I examine the spectacular fascist necropolitics staged as state-sponsored funeral performances during the short-lived National Legionary State (September 14, 1940–February 14, 1941). A detailed description of the massive campaign of exhumations and reburials of the so-called “legionary martyrs” carried out during this short time span, culminating with the grandiose ceremony organized for the reburial of Corneliu Zelea Codreanu on November 30, 1940, provides insight into the legionary thanatic worldview and ritual praxis. It also sheds light on the movement’s politics of commemoration, death, and afterlife and shows how these were embedded into a religious framework underpinned by theological concepts such as heroic martyrdom, vicarious atonement, and collective redemption.

https://doi.org/10.1017/nps.2020.22