par Telo, Mario
Référence European Stories: Intellectual Debates on Europe in National Contexts, Oxford University Press
Publication Publié, 2011-01
Partie d'ouvrage collectif
Résumé : Mario Telò focuses on the intellectual impetus for the rise of a large domestic consensus in favour of a federal European Union achieved in Italy during the First Republic (1947- 1992), particularly in the 1989 referendum, and addresses the role of intellectuals in explaining the continuities and discontinuities found in ideas about Europe between the First and Second Republic (1992-2008). The main argument is that the current normalisation of a pro-European intellectual presence in Italy maintains national particularities which cannot be explained without what the French historian Fernand Braudel called a longue durée approach. To this end, Telò demonstrates how seminal figures such as Altiero Spinelli and Alcide De Gasperi, and Catholic intellectuals more generally, laid the foundations for contemporary Italian narratives on Europe. He argues that these are now moving towards bipartisan convergences on EU Treaty ratification and a decline of the classical Euro-federalist approach that are moving Italy closer to a mainstream stance of pro-Europeanism.