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Backing Hitler By Robert Gellately: Fascism In Germany

1308 Words6 Pages

Alhanouf Foudah
History 387
2, MAR. 2017
Fascism in Germany
Books review
Germany after World War I has become a fertile ground for the spread of fascism ideology, and this is the foundation of Nazism, which became a national movement in that period. After words, Adolf Hitler became the leader of the nationalism Nazism. However, Nazism is the ideology that spread within the 20th-century. German Nazi Party and Nazi Germany, as well as other far-right groups. There are many writers were interesting to provide information about how the fascism appeal in Germany, and they made their argument based on their evidence. In this paper,
In Germans into Nazis by Peter Fritzsche is a work on the rise of Nazism in Germany, why the Germans embraced Hitler. …show more content…

Far from uniformly terrorizing its population with all-powerful and arbitrary police, the Third Reich selectively targeted "enemies" for persecution and elimination, confident of and fueled by the support of ordinary "Volk comrades." Without that popular agreement, the regime could not have pursued its lethal agenda to horrifying ends. Backing Hitler thus reinforces the now dominant view among historians—a view that the author deserves much credit for establishing—that Nazism's brutality arose from a mutually reinforcing animosity by the Party faithful and ordinary Germans toward a host of outcasts. Although more intense among Party leaders than the German population, this approach nonetheless guaranteed that no serious opposition would arise. Yet, Backing Hitler represents the expanded scope of Gellately's investigations into denunciation in the Third Reich. The author discusses popular attitudes toward the entire range of the Nazi regime's "enemies," while not neglecting the racial policy that chiefly commanded his attention in The Gestapo and German Society. In so doing, he aims to support his contention that Nazism's uniqueness, compared to other "great modern revolutions, like those in France, Russia, or China" (p. 257), resided in the relative absence of terror applied to the general population. The effectiveness of coercion against selected groups such as leftists, Jews and other racial "undesirables," and those who simply violated normative social behavior, lay in the acceptability of police justice, not to mention its practical advantages for denouncers

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