John Dickie is a leading member of a group of young historians working in British universities with a distinctive revisionist thrust to their work on modern and contemporary Italian history. They do not shy away from theory, whether historiographical or broadly social scientific, and are happy to challenge past and current monstres sacres, from Denis Mack Smith to Edward Said. [1]
Bibliography and publications
Dickie is the author of various books:
Darkest Italy. The Nation and Stereotypes of the Mezzogiorno, 1860-1900 (New York, 1999),
Cosa Nostra: A History Of The Sicilian Mafia (2004),[2] A "fine achievement" according to Professor Jane Schneider, in European History Quarterly (2008) 38#1 p.129-132.
Delizia! The Epic History of Italians and their Food (2007),
Una catastrofe patriottica. 1908: il terremoto di Messina (A Patriotic Catastrophe. 1908: The Earthquake of Messina, Rome, 2008),
Blood Brotherhoods: the Rise of the Italian Mafias (2011)
Mafia Republic: Italy's Criminal Curse. Cosa Nostra, 'Ndrangheta and Camorra from 1946 to the Present (2014).
In 2020 he published The Craft – How the Freemasons Made the Modern World.