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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The German Fascists: Nazi Political Culture
Toni Morantsubject
media_common.quotation_subjectPolitical religionReactionaryNazismlanguage.human_languageNationalismGermanPower (social and political)Political sciencePolitical economylanguagePolitical cultureWorld viewmedia_commondescription
The rise to power of National Socialism in early 1933 made Germany become the second fascist regime and seemingly confirm fascism’s universal character. In this text, Morant examines Nazism as the German exponent of the fascist political culture by focusing both on the most characteristic elements of its world view (anti-Semitism, the myth of the Volksgemeinschaft, its nature as a political religion and its totalitarian ambitions) and the visible representations of a movement that paid special attention to future generations and did not neglect (non-Jew) women, since they constituted at least half of the “national community”. Many of these elements distinguish Nazism from its reactionary nationalist allied rivals in Germany, while brought it closer to other exponents of the political culture of fascism in other European countries.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-01-01 |