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LEGACY OF BITTERNESS: Ethiopia and Fascist Italy, 1935-1941, by Alberto Sbacchi
LEGACY OF BITTERNESS: Ethiopia and Fascist Italy, 1935-1941, by Alberto Sbacchi
Product Description
Legacy of Bitterness: Ethiopia and Fascist Italy 1935-91 is an important study of the relationship between Ethiopia and Fascist Italy during the 1930s. Italy's colonial ambitions in Ethiopia and the gallant resistance of the Ethiopians led to global segmentation of world opinion. The legacy of bitterness in Italo-Ethiopian relations to which the title refers stems from the fact that the Italians, besides using poison gas during the invasion of Ethiopia, continued to commit atrocities against the colonial people during their five year presence in Ethiopia. In the anti-colonial resistance of the Ethiopians to Fascist rule, moreover, the Ethiopian nobility was conspicuously absent, focused as it was on its own self-preservation. In spite of a lack of leadership and coordination, however, the Ethiopians patriots delayed Italian demographic colonization and drained the Italian economy by keeping Ethiopia in a state of continuous warfare. The emergent Black nationalism of that period capitalized on the precarious internal situation of Ethiopia to win world public opinion and support in preventing the recognition of the Italian Empire. Italy's atrocities, including the use of banned poison gas, posed a dilemma that had to be addressed by the Western powers. The international community, for political reasons and military considerations - primarily the containment/appeasement of Nazi Germany - proceeded to eliminate the economic sanctions against Italy which had been imposed by the League of Nations, after two years of debate, acknowledged the (illegal) acquisition of Ethiopia by Italy. Thus was Ethiopia sacrificed for the security of Europe. The author, a renowned authority on the subject, has skillfully provided a broad perspective on the Italo-Ethiopian war global terms. His study looks at the response to the war by emergent black nationalism in the Diaspora, and Ethiopia's bitter struggle to tip the balance of world opinion in its favor.
"[This book is] a path-breaking achievement, [and] the most fully researched, analytical and rewarding treatment yet to appear on Fascist Italy in Ethiopia and on the international scene in the period immediately preceding World War II." - John H. Spencer, Professor Emeritus of International Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University; and former Legal and Foreign Adviser to the Imperial Ethiopian Government, 1936-1974
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ALBERTO SBACCHI is Professor of History at Atlantic Union College in Massachusetts. In 1993, Professor Sbacchi was inducted as a knight of the prestigious Cavaliere dell'Ordine al Merito della Republica Italiana (Knighthood of the Order of Merit of the Italian republic) for his outstanding contribution to Italian culture and scholarship. The author of five books and numerous articles, Alberto Sbacchi is considered one of the world's leading experts on the Italian Empire and Italy's involvement in Ethiopia.
CATEGORY
History, Politics/AFRICA