<p>«Whether casting Mussolini as Pontius Pilate or as Nero or depicting a bleeding sheep to represent the Slovene nation during the war or placing two Fascists in the crowd watching St Vitus being thrown to hungry lions, the anti-Fascist Kralj showed how art can be powerfully subversive. Egon Pelikan has produced an exciting book on an important chapter in anti-fascist history. Highly recommended.» (Sabrina P. Ramet, Author of <i>Alternatives to Democracy in Twentieth-Century Europe: Collectivist Visions of Modernity</i> (2019))</p>
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<p>«Rarely are we confronted with such commanding visual assertions of identity as we are in the public works of the artist Tone Kralj. Egon Pelikan’s authoritative analysis of Kralj’s wall paintings, found in churches that dot the countryside in the Slovene/Italian borderland Primorska, reveals a deeply humane view of a disturbing world. As Pelikan shows, their iconography lends the local space powerful alternative meanings that consistently subvert the efforts of the region’s varied twentieth-century rulers to transform it.» (Pieter M. Judson, European University Institute, Florence)</p>