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Nazism, political religion and 'ordinary' Germans

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-26, 04:19 authored by S Koehne
This paper examines the topic of Nazism and religion by taking one of the dominant schools of thought––that Nazism was a ‘political religion’––and dealing directly with an issue that is often encountered when teaching the history of the Nazi Party. A common question raised by students is this: what could be known about the Nazis when they came to power? While formulated in different ways and sometimes with a different chronological focus the core of this question is one of historicism. It may be abundantly clear to us now what the Nazis stood for, how racist and antisemitic they were, but what could be known by people then, and how did they view the Nazis? Given my sense that many teachers encounter this questions I believe it may be a useful prism through which to view Nazism and religion. The paper does so through using a case-study of the 'Temple Society' (Tempelgesellschaft), examining how members of this Christian community understood Nazism on the cusp of 1933.

History

Journal

Agora

Volume

49

Pagination

21-28

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0044-6726

eISSN

1837-9958

Language

eng

Publication classification

C3 Non-refereed articles in a professional journal

Copyright notice

2014, History Teachers' Association of Victoria

Issue

3

Publisher

History Teachers' Association of Victoria

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic.