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Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Essay --
Alexander CaraccioloWorld Civilizations II (A)Spring 2014ARTICLEHitler and the uncomparableness of national socialistsmIan Kershaw, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 39, No. 2, Understanding Nazi Germevery (Apr., 2004), pp. 239-254 I INTRODUCTIONThough national socialism can be sited as a form of fascism or type of totalitarianism, these common concepts inadequately throwaway for what was unique about the regime that unleashed such devastating inhumanity a dread(prenominal) war of annihilation and the worst genocide the world has yet experienced. This article suggests the answer is located in a unique mixture of unwavering forces emulsified in a vicious cocktail, Hitlers dictatorship. The extraordinary power of his charismatic authority, the distinctive mood of German political culture, and the bureaucratic capacity of a highly innovative state system ultimately lead to uprising and the uniqueness of Nazism.II. digest1.IntroductionIn the introduction, Ian Kershaw discusses what he considers common knowledge about the Nazi regime. Through a series of counterexamples, he disproves these theories as the singular causes of Nazism uniqueness. The idea that Hitler alone was unique is disproved, the idea that First World war was instrumental in Nazisms uniqueness was disproved and countless others.2. Hitlers IndispensabilityWhen describing Nazism it seems only natural to begin with Hitler. Although he himself cannot account for Nazisms uniqueness, his role as a dictator is inseparable in making this claim. Kershaw explains, no Hitler no SS-police state, no general europiuman war by the late 1930s, no attack on the Soviet Union, no Holocaust, no state policy aimed at wiping out the Jews of Europe (245). Yet the forces that led to the undermining of law, to... ...mbodied and its corrupting effect on the instruments and mechanisms of the most move state in Europe. Both the broad acceptance of the project of national salvation, seen as personified in Hitle r, and the internalization of the ideological goals by a new, modern power-elite, operating along-side modify old elites through the bureaucratic sophistication of a modern state, were needful prerequisites for the world-historical catastrophe of the Third Reich.III. SOURCESThis article is not based on any one primary source, but is instead smattered with the ideas from several historians. IV. SIGNIFICANCE/ diachronic CONTEXTIn addressing previous historical scholarship, Kershaw sheds new light on what is commonly thought of as Nazism. He recognizes other theories a be part Nazism but uses several sources to explain how they were not what was unquie to it.
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