Livre - Atatürk in the Nazi imagination
956 IHR
Description
Livre
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
Ihrig Stefan
Presentation materielle : 1 vol. (311 p.)
Dimensions : 25 cm
Early in his career, Adolf Hitler took inspiration from Benito Mussolini, his senior colleague in fascism—this fact is widely known. But an equally important role model for Hitler and the Nazis has been almost entirely neglected: Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey. Stefan Ihrig’s compelling presentation of this untold story promises to rewrite our understanding of the roots of Nazi ideology and strategy. Hitler was deeply interested in Turkish affairs after 1919. He not only admired but also sought to imitate Atatürk’s radical construction of a new nation from the ashes of defeat in World War I. Hitler and the Nazis watched closely as Atatürk defied the Western powers to seize government, and they modeled the Munich Putsch to a large degree on Atatürk’s rebellion in Ankara. Hitler later remarked that in the political aftermath of the Great War, Atatürk was his master, he and Mussolini his students. This was no fading fascination. As the Nazis struggled through the 1920s, Atatürk remained Hitler’s “star in the darkness,” his inspiration for remaking Germany along nationalist, secular, totalitarian, and ethnically exclusive lines. Nor did it escape Hitler’s notice how ruthlessly Turkish governments had dealt with Armenian and Greek minorities, whom influential Nazis directly compared with German Jews. The New Turkey, or at least those aspects of it that the Nazis chose to see, became a model for Hitler’s plans and dreams in the years leading up to the invasion of Poland. Stefan Ihrig is Polonsky Fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute. *Commended, 2013 Fraenkel Prize, Category A, Wiener Library for the Study of Holocaust and Genocide “From the Armenian massacres to the Turkish War of Independence and the rise of Kemal Atatürk, Turkish events attracted deep interest in Germany. As Ihrig shows, politically active Germans of the Weimar Republic, especially on the far right, saw in Turkey a model for successful revisionism, authoritarian rule, secular modernization and the political utility of genocide. This brilliant and original study sheds new light on the rise of Nazism and the pre-history of Nazi racial policy.” – Christopher Clark, University of Cambridge “This is a most important and refreshingly original book about a hitherto unknown yet pivotal influence on Adolf Hitler and other National Socialists. Its eye-opening conclusions will change how we think about German and European history as well as the Holocaust.” – Thomas Weber, University of Aberdeen
Prologue: Leaving “Enverland”, p. 1 1. Turkish Lessons for Germany: The Turkish War of Independence as a Major Weimar Media Event, 1919-1923, p. 10 2. “Ankara in Munich”: The Hitler Putsch and Turkey, p. 68 3. Hitler’s “Star in the Darkness”: Nazi Admiration for Atatürk and His New Turkey, p. 108 4. The “Turkish Führer”: Nazi Hagiography and National Education, p. 147 5. The New Turkey: Nazi Visions of a Modern Völkisch State, p. 172 6. The Second World War and Turkey: Another Spain?, p. 209 Epilogue: First Stone, Then to Dust, p. 223 Note on Sources and Historiography, p. 233 Notes, p. 237 Acknowledgments, p. 303 Index, p. 307