This book deals with the reception of Italian elitism in the United
States, identifying its key protagonists, phases, and themes. It starts
from the reconstruction of the scientific and political debates aroused
in the United States by the works of Mosca, Pareto, and Michels, and
moves on to define their theoretical influence in the American
scientific and academic contexts. The analysis takes into consideration
the period from the first contact between elitists and American academia
in the early 1920s to the publication of The Power Elite by Mills, in
1956, which marks the emancipation of American elitism. After
introducing the fundamental principles of elite theory, the first part
of the study reconstructs the debate that it aroused beyond the
Atlantic. The second part examines the original American reworking of
the elitist lesson, concentrating on the works of the authors most
strongly influenced by it: Joseph A. Schumpeter, Harold D. Lasswell, and
Charles W. Mills. The book aims to shed light on the contribution of
Italian elitism to the development of American political thought.