Mauro Canali

Mauro Canali is a full professor of contemporary history at the University of Camerino in Italy. He is considered to be one of the most important scholars of the events leading to the crisis of the liberal Italian state and the rise of fascism. He has also researched and published extensively on the totalitarian structure of Mussolini's regime, its repressive mechanisms and its system of informants. He studied under Renzo De Felice, and has published in the Journal of Modern Italian Studies, the Italian dailies la Repubblica and Cronache di Liberal.

Career

Canali has participated in conferences and held seminars at European and American universities including the University of Copenhagen, University of Gothenburg, University of Barcelona, Harvard University, Brown University and the University of Massachusetts. From October through December 2006 he was a visiting scholar at Harvard University. He is frequently asked to contribute to and appear in history-related programs and documentaries on Italian TV such as "La Storia siamo noi", and is on the board of Rai Storia, the network's history channel. He consults for the program Res Gestae - persone, ricorrenze, eventi - an almanac of historical figures and events with a daily commentary called "100 seconds" that focuses on the most important historical events of the day.

L'informatore. Silone i comunisti e la polizia

His book, L'informatore. Silone i comunisti e la polizia, (coauthored with Dario Biocca), which revealed the collaboration between the well-known Abruzzi author Ignazio Silone and the Fascist political police during the 1920s, was the subject of much debate among historians in Italy and abroad. It was discussed in publications including New Left Review,[1] The New Yorker, and The Nation.

Honors and Awards

In 1998 Mr. Canali was awarded the Walter Tobagi Prize[2] for his book Il delitto Matteotti. Affarismo e politica nel primo governo Mussolini. He was awarded the Bruno Buozzi Prize in 2005[3] for:

...having contributed, with his book "Le spie del regime," to a deeper understanding of one of the most disturbing and unknown aspects of the Fascist period in Italy. His book is the culmination of deeply felt and highly accurate research, based on reliable and at times unpublished documents that have spurned the reopening of the debate on the historical truth behind events whose importance had remained under-estimated...

In 2010 ANPI awarded him with the Premio Renato Benedetto Fabrizi. In 2014, Canali was awarded the Premio Internazionale Capalbio for his book Il tradimento. Gramsci Togliatti e la verità negata

He is Advisor of the American Academy in Roma.

Publications

Notes

  1. Foot, John (May–June 2000). "The secret life of Ignazio Silone". New Left Review (New Left Review) II (3).
  2. Premio Walter Tobagi a Fini e a Ichino, Corriere della Sera, 13 dicembre 1997
  3. fondazione Bruno Buozzi

References

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