Waubonsee Community College

Where ghosts walked, Munich's road to the Third Reich, David Clay Large

Label
Where ghosts walked, Munich's road to the Third Reich, David Clay Large
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 363-394) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Where ghosts walked
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
36315969
Responsibility statement
David Clay Large
Sub title
Munich's road to the Third Reich
Summary
The capital of the Nazi movement was not Berlin but Munich. So said the Fuhrer, Adolf Hitler, of this handsome Bavarian town on the banks of the Isar River. Munich, the city of baroque buildings, fine art museums, and Oktoberfest, was where Hitler felt most at home. It was the birthplace of Nazism and became the chief cultural shrine of the Third Reich. Why did Nazism flourish in the "Athens of the Isar"? In exploring this question, David Clay Large has written a compelling narrative account of the cultural roots of the Nazi movement. His focus on Munich allows us to see that the conventional explanations for the movement's rise are not enoughLarge's account begins in Munich's "golden age," the four decades before World War I, when the city's artists and writers produced some of the outstanding works of the modernist spirit. But there was a dark side, a protofascist cultural heritage that would tie Hitler's movement to the soul of the city. Large prowls this volatile world, its eccentric poets and publishers, its salons and seamy basement meeting places. In this hothouse atmosphere attacks on cosmopolitan modernity and political liberalism flourished, along with a virulent anti-Semitism and German nationalism
Table Of Contents
Introduction: "Athens on the Isar" -- Germany's Bohemia -- The great swindle -- Red Munich -- Birthplace of nazism -- To the Feldherrnhalle -- "The dumbest city in Germany" -- Capital of the movement -- Babylon on the Isar -- Götterdämmerung -- Epilogue: Reckoning with(out) the past in the "world city with heart"
Classification
Content
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