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Never forget that you are a German: Die Bruecke,  Deutschtum  and National Socialism in Interwar Australia
Hardback

Never forget that you are a German: Die Bruecke, Deutschtum and National Socialism in Interwar Australia

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This book is the first detailed cultural study of Nazi ideology as it was presented to the interwar Australian public, most particularly its German-Australian population. The newspaper Die Brucke (The Bridge) was launched in Sydney in 1934. It was the brainchild of the League of Germans in Australia and New Zealand and the German-Australian Chamber of Commerce. Deutschtum (Germanness) was at the heart of its mission, as it was at the heart of National Socialism itself. The question of how Germanness could be defined was at the core of German political and social debate long before Germany’s national formation, and only intensified following it. National Socialism provided a new means of defining Deutschtum . Die Brucke, seeking to lead a renewed embrace of Germanness among members of the German-Australian community, hoped that German identity would be exhumed from its perceived anglicised entombment by wholly adopting a Nazi understanding of German self. As such, Die Brucke was partially funded by Germany’s Nazi government. Die Brucke’s publication represents the most significant statement made in Australia of a nazified Deutschtum and a challenge to the idea that Nazism was not for export .

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Peter Lang AG
Country
Switzerland
Date
26 August 2011
Pages
297
ISBN
9783631605240

This book is the first detailed cultural study of Nazi ideology as it was presented to the interwar Australian public, most particularly its German-Australian population. The newspaper Die Brucke (The Bridge) was launched in Sydney in 1934. It was the brainchild of the League of Germans in Australia and New Zealand and the German-Australian Chamber of Commerce. Deutschtum (Germanness) was at the heart of its mission, as it was at the heart of National Socialism itself. The question of how Germanness could be defined was at the core of German political and social debate long before Germany’s national formation, and only intensified following it. National Socialism provided a new means of defining Deutschtum . Die Brucke, seeking to lead a renewed embrace of Germanness among members of the German-Australian community, hoped that German identity would be exhumed from its perceived anglicised entombment by wholly adopting a Nazi understanding of German self. As such, Die Brucke was partially funded by Germany’s Nazi government. Die Brucke’s publication represents the most significant statement made in Australia of a nazified Deutschtum and a challenge to the idea that Nazism was not for export .

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Peter Lang AG
Country
Switzerland
Date
26 August 2011
Pages
297
ISBN
9783631605240