Description

Book Synopsis
This book analyses the political, financial, military, and ideological contributions of many 'White émigrés', anti-Bolshevik Russian exiles, to Nazism. It demonstrates that Nazism did not develop as a peculiarly German phenomenon and examines Aufbau (Reconstruction), a far right German-White émigré organization which collaborated with Nazis from 1920–1923.

Trade Review
Review of the hardback: 'Michael Kellogg's The Russian Roots of Nazism is a major contribution to the research on the origins of Nazism. In a domain where so much has been published and discussed, Kellogg's work succeeds in introducing a dimension never so thoroughly explored: the essential impact on early Nazi world-view of ideological elements and political themes, carried over to Germany by White-Russian emigres.' Professor Saul Friedlander, 1939 Club Chair in Holocaust Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles and Maxwell Cummings Chair of European History at Tel Aviv University

Table of Contents
Introduction; 1. The far right in the German and Russian empires; 2. At the extreme in the Ukraine and in Germany; 3. The Latvian intervention and the Kapp Putsch; 4. The radical right's Aufbau (Reconstruction) in Munich; 5. 'Germany-Russia above everything'; 6. Conspiracies of fire and the sword; 7. 'In quick march to the abyss!'; 8. The four writers of the Apocalypse; 9. Aufbau's legacy to National Socialism; Conclusion.

The Russian Roots of Nazism White migrs and the Making of National Socialism 19171945 White migrs and the Making of National Socialism 19171945 New Studies in European History

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    A Paperback by Michael Kellogg

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      View other formats and editions of The Russian Roots of Nazism White migrs and the Making of National Socialism 19171945 White migrs and the Making of National Socialism 19171945 New Studies in European History by Michael Kellogg

      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 7/31/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780521070058, 978-0521070058
      ISBN10: 0521070058

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book analyses the political, financial, military, and ideological contributions of many 'White émigrés', anti-Bolshevik Russian exiles, to Nazism. It demonstrates that Nazism did not develop as a peculiarly German phenomenon and examines Aufbau (Reconstruction), a far right German-White émigré organization which collaborated with Nazis from 1920–1923.

      Trade Review
      Review of the hardback: 'Michael Kellogg's The Russian Roots of Nazism is a major contribution to the research on the origins of Nazism. In a domain where so much has been published and discussed, Kellogg's work succeeds in introducing a dimension never so thoroughly explored: the essential impact on early Nazi world-view of ideological elements and political themes, carried over to Germany by White-Russian emigres.' Professor Saul Friedlander, 1939 Club Chair in Holocaust Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles and Maxwell Cummings Chair of European History at Tel Aviv University

      Table of Contents
      Introduction; 1. The far right in the German and Russian empires; 2. At the extreme in the Ukraine and in Germany; 3. The Latvian intervention and the Kapp Putsch; 4. The radical right's Aufbau (Reconstruction) in Munich; 5. 'Germany-Russia above everything'; 6. Conspiracies of fire and the sword; 7. 'In quick march to the abyss!'; 8. The four writers of the Apocalypse; 9. Aufbau's legacy to National Socialism; Conclusion.

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