Bottai worked to the Ministry of Corporations, introducing the Labour Charter and planning a Corporative Academic Pole in Pisa, from 1926 to 1932, when he was excluded by Mussolini from the Ministry.[6] In 1933, Bottai established and chaired the National Institute of the Social Security (Italian: Istituto nazionale della previdenza sociale, INPS). He was appointed governor of Rome (1935–1936) but resigned to fight in the Second Italo-Ethiopian War with the rank of major. On 5 May 1936, Bottai and Pietro Badoglio entered in Addis Abeba, and Bottai was appointed as vice governor. After the war, Bottai returned in Rome to be Education Minister. During his ministry, Bottai proclaimed a law (the Bottai Law) on safeguarding public and cultural heritage and the preservation of natural beauties.[7] He also co-worked with art critics Giulio Carlo Argan and Cesare Brandi to improve the Italian cultural life.
In the late 1930s, Bottai became more radical and a Germanophile. In 1938, he expressed support to racial laws against Italian Jews, and in 1940 founded Primato (Primacy), a magazine that supported the Aryan race's supremacy and interventionism in the war.[8][9] Bottai thought that the "Fascist Revolution" was incomplete and that what was needed was a return to the original and more "pure" fascism.
After the war, Bottai remained in France and continued to serve in the Foreign Legion until 1948, when he was discharged. For his role in the final stages of World War II, he got an amnesty for his role in fascism. Returning in Italy in 1953, Bottai founded the periodical ABC (not to be confused with the magazine with the same name) and Il Popolo di Roma, which was financed by ex-fascist Vittorio Cini, who supported centrist and conservative views. Bottai died in Rome in 1959. At his funeral was Aldo Moro who, like Moro's father, had been Bottai's friend and assistant during his career.[11]
Bibliography
Trade organisation in Italy under the act and regulations on collective relations in connection with employment
Economia fascista (1930)
Grundprinzipien des korporativen Aufbaus in Italien (1933)
Esperienza corporativa (1929–1935) (1935)
Corporazioni (1935)
Scritti giuridici in onore di Santi Romano ... (1940)
Funzione di Roma nella vita culturale e scientifica della nazione (1940)
Pagine di critica fascista (1915–1926) (1941, edited by F. M. Pacces)
Romanità e germanesimo: letture tenute per il Lyceum di Firenze (1941, edited by Jolanda de Blasi)
Von der römischen zur faschistischen Korporation (1942)
Köpfe des risorgimento (1943)
Contributi all'elaborazione delle scienze corporative (1939-XVIII—1942-XX) (1943)
Vent 'anni e un giorno, 24 luglio 1943 (1949). Republished as Vent'anni e un giorno (24 luglio 1943) (1977).
Legione è il mio nome (1950). Republished as Legione è il mio nome: il coraggioso epilogo di un gerarca del fascismo (I memoriali) (1999, edited by Marcello Staglieno)
Scritti (1965, edited by Roberto Bartolozzi and Riccardo Del Giudice)
Diario, 1935–1944 (1982, edited by Giordano Bruno Guerri)
Carteggio 1940–1957, correspondence between Bottai and Don Giuseppe De Luca; edited by Renzo De Felice and Renato Moro (1989)
La politica delle arti: Scritti, 1918–1943 (1992, edited by Alessandro Masi).
^Sabino Cassese (1971). Bottai, Giuseppe – Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. Treccani.
^Maddalena, Carli (2010). "Un movimento artistico crea un partito politico : il futurismo italiano tra avanguardismo e normalizzazione". Memoria e ricerca.
^Michele Terzaghi (1950). Fascismo e massoneria. Arnaldo Forni Editore. p. 171.
^Berto Ricci (1984). Lo Scrittore Italiano (in Italian). Ciarrapico.
^Roberto Finzi (2008). La cultura italiana e le leggi antiebraiche del 1938 (in Italian). Carocci. p. 915.
^Enzo Forcella (1999). La resistenza in convento. Einaudi.
^Aldo Moro (2009). Lettere dalla prigionia. Einaudi.
References
Incontro con Bottai by Mario Carli and Bruno D'Agostini (1938)
Giuseppe Bottai, un fascista critico : ideologia e azione del gerarca che avrebbe voluto portare l'intelligenza nel fascismo e il fascismo alla liberalizzazione by Giordano Bruno Guerri (1976 – Republished as Giuseppe Bottai, fascista, 1996).
Bottai : il fascismo come rivoluzione del capitale (1978, edited by Anna Panicali)
Scuola e la pedagogia del fascismo by Maria Bellucci and Michele Ciliberto (1978).
Giuseppe Bottai e la riforma fascista della scuola by Rino Gentili. (1979)
Bottai tra capitale e lavoro by Amleto Di Marcantonio (1980)