Results 301 to 310 of about 207,397 (359)
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National Socialism and Social Capital
1997Having looked at the case of Germany in the 1920s and 1930s in terms of its concrete politics and the basic class sociology behind it, we must now ‘situate’ class politics in the phenomenon of deliberate regime change by the power bloc to avert a revolutionary situation. This, as we shall see, is part of the ‘logic’ of social capital.
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German urologists under national socialism
World Journal of Urology, 2013The first full-time professorship for urology at a German university was established in 1937 and in 1942, a rare teaching qualification (Habilitation) for urology was granted, both at the prestigious Berlin University. At the same time, nearly a third of all physicians who worked in the field of urology were classified as "non-Aryan" according to Nazi ...
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2000
Abstract In 1863 the call for action was heeded. Aided by the atmosphere of reform in the tsarist empire during the early 1860s, patriotic activists in Warsaw began a campaign of public demonstrations on behalf of the Polish cause. Each time the Russians tried to suppress these protests, the movement only grew.
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Abstract In 1863 the call for action was heeded. Aided by the atmosphere of reform in the tsarist empire during the early 1860s, patriotic activists in Warsaw began a campaign of public demonstrations on behalf of the Polish cause. Each time the Russians tried to suppress these protests, the movement only grew.
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Freud, Hitler and National Socialism
The Psychoanalytic Review, 2003“On April 1, 1924, I entered upon my prison term in the fortress of Landsberg am Lech, as sentenced by the People’s court in Munich on that day” (Hitler, 1927, p. vi) And thus begins Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf. It was not a book that he wrote so much as dictated to two colleagues, Emil Maurice, his chauffeur and allaround lackey, and then to Rudolf Hess,
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2000
Abstract Carl Mierendorff, a young Social Democrat (SPD) member of the Reichstag and later member of the Resistance, wrote regular discussions of National Socialism for the journal Sozialistische Monatshefte during the years 1930 to 1933. Critical both of the SPD’s policy of ‘toleration’ of Chancellor Bruning, which he regarded as overly
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Abstract Carl Mierendorff, a young Social Democrat (SPD) member of the Reichstag and later member of the Resistance, wrote regular discussions of National Socialism for the journal Sozialistische Monatshefte during the years 1930 to 1933. Critical both of the SPD’s policy of ‘toleration’ of Chancellor Bruning, which he regarded as overly
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Nationalism, Socialism, and National-Socialism in France
French Historical Studies, 1962openaire +1 more source

