Patrick G. Zander is Professor of History at Georgia Gwinnett College in Atlanta, GA. He is the author of seven books on 20th-century history.
“Not simply relics from a bygone age, Britain’s interwar fascists were at the same time radical vision-aries who imagined a high-modernist future. With ambitions to regenerate Britain into the world’s dominant imperial power, Zander’s study explores how interwar fascists sought to transform Britain into a technologically advanced, powerful, self-sufficient empire. In exposing the modernizing (and contradictory) ambitions behind their frankly dystopian dreams, this book shatters the myth that British fascism was a backward-looking reactionary creed.” — Professor Nigel Copsey, Teesside University, UK “Can a work focusing on British fascism between the world wars have anything relevant to say about contemporary events? This excellent book answers that query with a resounding and emphatic ‘yes.’ Wisley allowing the fascists to speak for themselves, Zander reveals a movement obsessed with futur-ism and modernization, yet at the same time hoping to preserve the British Empire by what the author terms an ‘exclusive nationalism,’ a xenophobic, racist, and profoundly anti-Semitic program that en-compassed ‘walling off’ Great Britain from foreign entanglements, while at the same time ‘purifying’ the national community within from those very same ‘foreign’ elements. Timely indeed.” — David Redles, Professor of History at Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, Ohio, and author of Hit-ler’s Millennial Reich: Apocalyptic Belief and the Search for Salvation (2008) and co-author, along with Jackson Spielvogel, of Hitler and Nazi Germany 9th ed. (2020) “This diligently researched critical evaluation of the nature of fascist ideology in interwar Britain is provocative and highly readable. It is accessible to both specialists and students, and makes important points about the evident tensions and contradictions at the heart of the fascist creed. It also reminds us how an understanding of the fascism of the past can help scholars identify some of those same con-tradictions at work in the current resurgence of the radical right.” — Dr. Steven Woodbridge, Kingston University, London