secular religion
Dear Colleague, the history of politics and religion in Germany in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries is central to the rise of national socialism and the core ideas of a man like Hitler, actually. If you provide me with your coordinates, I can give you much, fruitful further reading on this subject. One place to begin is with George Mosse, whose work you can find in amazon or advanced book exchange. The books on religion and national socialism fill shelf upon shelf. The issue is one of how secular, nationalist forces in the course of the 19th century make the belief in nation based on race into a religion itself (cf. Mein Kampf and all its antecedents...) and the way in which the Nazis go after established sectors of society (ie. the church) and force them to accept the social darwinist ideals of race in their most extreme forms, which breaks down a lot of judeo-Christian values, to be sure. Nation, Volk and Race become gods themselves, and in the SS, the Nordic antecedents are plainly conceived as an assault on bourgeois and dynastic society as they have existed for the past two centuries in central Europe. There are ideas from the French Revolution, as well as from the latter part of the 19th century when the Prussian-German state tries to limit the worldly power of the church. This process did not work all the time, nor everywhere. But read the new book on Alfred Rosenberg, as well as the excellent book in German on the failed priest who became the head of anti-Catholic activities in the RSHA. I shall add the citation later. Sapere aude.
Originally posted by Jarrid Marsh
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