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Empire of the Ordinary. Trapping Ordinary People between Institutional Corruption and Survival
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- Nombre de pages245
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-41009-5
- EAN9783565410095
- Date de parution14/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Sicily has long been an island where ordinary life was conducted in the shadow of two powers: the state, which promised justice but rarely delivered it, and the Mafia, which delivered order but always at a price. Scholars argue that the Mafia did not arise despite the state, but because of it - filling the institutional vacuum left by centuries of inconsistent, corrupt, and distant governance. For the peasant, the merchant, the widow, and the tenant farmer, the choice was never between good and evil.
It was between one form of coercion and another. This book follows the lives of those who fell between these two structures - the ordinary Sicilians who paid the pizzo not out of loyalty but out of fear, who turned to Mafia brokers not out of admiration but because the courts were unreachable, the police were compromised, and the landlords were untouchable. It examines how institutional corruption did not merely enable the Mafia - it manufactured the conditions in which ordinary people had no rational alternative to compliance. From the peasant uprisings of the late 19th century - the Fasci Siciliani - crushed with the help of Mafia enforcers hired by landowners and local politicians, to the pizzo-paying shopkeepers of modern Palermo, the pattern endures.
The Italian government, following unification in 1860, proved unable to impose rule of law on the island, and discontent deepened as promises of reform dissolved into new forms of extraction. Yet this is not a story without resistance. When the merchants of Capo d'Orlando formed Sicily's first anti-racket association in 1990, they proved something the Mafia had always denied: that ordinary people, given structural support, could refuse the trap.
Their courage did not erase history - but it illuminated, at last, how ordinary the victims had always been, and how extraordinary survival could become.
It was between one form of coercion and another. This book follows the lives of those who fell between these two structures - the ordinary Sicilians who paid the pizzo not out of loyalty but out of fear, who turned to Mafia brokers not out of admiration but because the courts were unreachable, the police were compromised, and the landlords were untouchable. It examines how institutional corruption did not merely enable the Mafia - it manufactured the conditions in which ordinary people had no rational alternative to compliance. From the peasant uprisings of the late 19th century - the Fasci Siciliani - crushed with the help of Mafia enforcers hired by landowners and local politicians, to the pizzo-paying shopkeepers of modern Palermo, the pattern endures.
The Italian government, following unification in 1860, proved unable to impose rule of law on the island, and discontent deepened as promises of reform dissolved into new forms of extraction. Yet this is not a story without resistance. When the merchants of Capo d'Orlando formed Sicily's first anti-racket association in 1990, they proved something the Mafia had always denied: that ordinary people, given structural support, could refuse the trap.
Their courage did not erase history - but it illuminated, at last, how ordinary the victims had always been, and how extraordinary survival could become.





















