His later writings argue that fascism is not only a phenomenon of early twentieth-century Europe, but an “eternal” threat than had oppressed people in the past and could continue to do so in the future. In his lifetime, Umberto Eco witnessed the rise of fascism in Italy and the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini (1922-1943). William tells Adso that “I behaved stubbornly, pursuing a semblance of order, when I should have known well that there is no order in the universe”-this is a central idea of postmodernist theory. Many pieces of dialogue and plot points in the novel testify to its postmodern themes, such as William’s statement that “books always speak of other books” and the ultimate failure of his theory that the murders are following a grand design according to the Book of Revelation. Postmodernism is characterized by skepticism about the objective nature of any truth, a distrust of universal explanations, and an emphasis on “intertextuality” (the way in which texts reference or respond to other texts). The Name of the Rose was written and published in the 1970s and 1980s, a period in which postmodernist theory was becoming an increasingly powerful force in European and American literary and intellectual life.
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