10.3280/IC2021-297-S1OA-002
https://zenodo.org/records/7212693
oai:zenodo.org:7212693
Caponi, Matteo
Matteo
Caponi
Università di Genova
Antirazzismo cattolico e questione nera nell'Italia del secondo dopoguerra
FrancoAngeli
2021
Italian Catholicism
Anti-Racism
Anti-Black Racism
Decolonization
Apartheid
Civil Rights Movement (United States)
2021-12-31
https://zenodo.org/communities/eu
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Catholic Anti-Racism and the Black Question in Italy after the Second World War
This article explores how a growing focus on the Black Question framed an anti-racist sensibility in post-WWII Italian Catholicism. The cliché of a natural Catholic anti-racism is herein challenged by investigating interracialism as a mainline pattern: that is a third way opposed to both racism and militant, humanitarian and egalitarian anti-racism. The notion of anti-racism actually struggled to be incorporated within Catholic mass culture until the 1960s. This breakthrough was the result of the impact of three world-wide known phenomena: decolonization, apartheid in South Africa, and the US civil rights movement. Ironically, the Cold War anti-Communist psychosis was a driver of Catholic anti-racism: it was vital for preventing the “awakening” of black peoples occurring under Soviet fascination. The pontificate of John XXIII, the Vatican II aggiornamento and the 1968 crisis laid the groundwork for a paradigm shift, as anti-racist attitudes intersected liberal meanings and countercultural revolutionary utopias.
European Commission
10.13039/501100000780
794780
Catholicism and the “Negro Question”: Religion, Racism, and Antiracism in a Transnational
Perspective (United States and Europe, 1934-1968)