nazism$51817$ - definizione. Che cos'è nazism$51817$
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Cosa (chi) è nazism$51817$ - definizione

PHILOSOPHER'S RELATIONS TO THE POLITICS OF HIS TIME
Heidegger and Nazism; Heidegger’s Nazi sympathies; Heidegger's engagement with Nazism
  • Adolf Hitler was made [[Chancellor of Germany]] in January 1933.
  • Election banner, November 1933: "One People, one Leader, one 'Yes'"
  • Edmund Husserl, the man who established the school of phenomenology
  • Martin Heidegger circa 1960
  • [[Hermann Staudinger]]
  • [[Jürgen Habermas]]
  • Rector]] from April 21, 1933, to April 23, 1934

Religious aspects of Nazism         
  • access-date=23 January 2018}}</ref>
OVERVIEW ABOUT RELIGIOUS ASPECTS OF NAZISM
Occult Bureau of the SS; Nazism and religion
Historians, political scientists and philosophers have studied Nazism with a specific focus on its religious and pseudo-religious aspects."Semi-religious beliefs in a race of Aryan god-men, the needful extermination of inferiors, and an idealized millennial future of German world-domination obsessed Hitler, Himmler and many other high-ranking Nazi leaders.
Nazism and cinema         
  • SA]] leader [[Viktor Lutze]] (from L to R) on the stone terrace; from ''[[Triumph of the Will]]'', directed by [[Leni Riefenstahl]].
GERMAN CINEMATOGRAPHY BETWEEN 1933-1945
Reich Film Chamber; National socialist film policy; Herbert Gerdes; Nazi Films; Nazi films; Nazi film industry; Nazi cinema
Nazism created an elaborate system of propaganda, which made use of the new technologies of the 20th century, including cinema. Nazism courted the masses by the means of slogans that were aimed directly at the instincts and emotions of the people.
neo-Nazi         
  • Graffiti depicting the U symbol of the [[Ustashe]] during the [[Anti-Cyrillic protests in Croatia]]
  • right
  • left
  • left
  • Members of the [[National Bolshevik Party]]. "Nazbols" tailor ultra-nationalist themes to a native Russian environment while still employing Nazi aesthetics.
  • Flag of the Dayar Mongol, a neo-Nazi party in Mongolia
  • Flag of the [[National Socialist Movement of Chile]]
  • Guénonian Traditionalism]] via [[Julius Evola]].
  • Flag of the [[SUMKA]]
  • The radicalisation of Flemish activist group [[Vlaamse Militanten Orde]] in the 1970s energised international neo-Nazism.
  • The nearest Italy came to returning to [[fascism]] was the 1970 [[Golpe Borghese]] of commando veteran [[Junio Valerio Borghese]].
  • The 1980s dispute between Austrian president [[Kurt Waldheim]] and the [[World Jewish Congress]] caused an international incident.
  • Golden Dawn]]
  • US Capitol]], Washington, DC, 2008
  • Neo-Nazi demonstration in [[Leipzig]], Germany, in October 2009
  • A neo-Nazi in Russia. The photograph was taken at an anti-gay demonstration in Moscow in October 2010.
  • ONR march in [[Poznań]] in November 2015
  • [[Wehrmacht]]}} general and leader of the postwar [[Socialist Reich Party]]
  • German Social Union]], returned from exile to Germany in the mid-1950s.
  • url-status=live }}</ref> photographed in 1976, wearing the IKL uniform, a blue tie and a black shirt
  • Thompson]] concert
  • political party in the United Kingdom]].
MOVEMENT TO REVIVE NAZI IDEOLOGIES
Neo-Nazi; Neo-nazism; Neonazism; Neo-nazi; Neo Nazi; Neo-Nazis; Neo Nazism; Neonazi; NeoNazism; Neo-Nazi groups of the United States; Neo-Nazi movement; Neo-nazis; Nazi parties; Neonazis; Neo nazi; Neo-Naziism; Neo-nacists; Nynazism; Neo Nazis; Neo nazis; Neo-Nazism in Germany; Russian neo-nazism; Neo-nazism in estonia; Neo-nazism in Croatia; Neo-National Socialism; Neo-National Socialist; Neonacizm; Neo-Nazism in Croatia; German neo-Nazi; Russian neo-Nazis; Russian neo-Nazi; Neo-Nazist; American neo-Nazi; Neo-Nazism in the United States; Neo-Nazism in Europe; Neo-Nazism in Greece; Neo-national socialists; Neo-national-socialism; Neo-Hitlerite; Neohitlerite; Neohitlerism; Neo-Hitlerism; Neo-Hitlerites; Neohitlerites; American Neo-Nazis; American Neo-Nazi; Neo-Nazism in Costa Rica; Neo-Nazism in Ukraine; New nazism; Ukrainian neo-Nazi; Finnish neo-Nazis; Serbian neo-Nazis; Romanian neo-Nazis; German neo-Nazis; Greek neo-Nazis; British neo-Nazis; Neo-Nazism in Israel; Australian neo-Nazis; Estonian neo-Nazis; Pakistani neo-Nazis; Polish neo-Nazis; Hungarian neo-Nazis; Spanish neo-Nazis; Neo-Nazism in Slovakia; Neo-Nazism in Russia; Neo-nazism in Russia; Neo-Nazism in Spain; Neo-Nazism in America; Neo nazist; Neo-Nazism in the Czech Republic; Neo-Nazism in Hungary; Neo-Nazism in South Africa; Neo-Nazism in Turkey; Neo-Nazism in Taiwan; Neo-Nazism in the Netherlands
¦ noun (plural neo-Nazis) a person with extreme racist or nationalist views.
¦ adjective relating to neo-Nazis.
Derivatives
neo-Nazism noun

Wikipedia

Martin Heidegger and Nazism

Philosopher Martin Heidegger joined the Nazi Party (NSDAP) on May 1, 1933, ten days after being elected Rector of the University of Freiburg. A year later, in April 1934, he resigned the Rectorship and stopped taking part in Nazi Party meetings, but remained a member of the Nazi Party until its dismantling at the end of World War II. The denazification hearings immediately after World War II led to Heidegger's dismissal from Freiburg, banning him from teaching. In 1949, after several years of investigation, the French military finally classified Heidegger as a Mitläufer or "fellow traveller." The teaching ban was lifted in 1951, and Heidegger was granted emeritus status in 1953, but he was never allowed to resume his philosophy chairmanship.

Heidegger's involvement with Nazism, his attitude towards Jews and his near-total silence about the Holocaust in his writing and teaching after 1945 are highly controversial. The Black Notebooks, written between 1931 and 1941, contain several anti-semitic statements, although they also contain several statements where Heidegger appears extremely critical of racial antisemitism. After 1945, Heidegger never published anything about the Holocaust or the extermination camps, and made one sole verbal mention of them, in 1949, whose meaning is disputed among scholars. Heidegger never apologized for anything and is only known to have expressed regret once, privately, when he described his rectorship and the related political engagement as "the greatest stupidity of his life" ("die größte Dummheit seines Lebens").

Whether there is a relation between Heidegger's political affiliation and his philosophy is another matter of controversy. Critics, such as Günther Anders, Jürgen Habermas, Theodor Adorno, Hans Jonas, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Karl Löwith, Pierre Bourdieu, Maurice Blanchot, Emmanuel Levinas, Luc Ferry, Jacques Ellul, and Alain Renaut assert that Heidegger's affiliation with the Nazi Party revealed flaws inherent in his philosophical conceptions. His supporters, such as Hannah Arendt, Otto Pöggeler, Jan Patočka, Silvio Vietta, Jacques Derrida, Jean Beaufret, Jean-Michel Palmier, Richard Rorty, Marcel Conche, Julian Young, Catherine Malabou, and François Fédier, see his involvement with Nazism as a personal "error" – a word which Arendt placed in quotation marks when referring to Heidegger's Nazi-era politics – that is irrelevant to his philosophy.