Construction of a National Socialist Europe during the Second World War

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A01=Raimund Bauer
Abyssinia
Adolf Hitler
anti-Semitism
Atomic Bomb
Auschwitz
Author_Raimund Bauer
Battle of Britain
Benito Mussolini
Britain in World War II
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Category=NHD
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Central Clearing System
Concentration Camps
Demarcation Lines
Dresdner Bank
Dunkirk
Eastern Front
economic decision making
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eq_history
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European Post-war Order
Fascism
fascist economic policy
Franklin D. Roosevelt
German European Policy
German expansionism
German Heavy Industry
German Lebensraum
German Occupation Authorities
German Occupation Policy
German Volksgemeinschaft
GIs
Hiroshima
Hitler
Holocaust
IG Farben
Japanese Invasion
Major German Banks
mass murder
Nagasaki
National Committee
National Revolution
National Socialist Germany
National Socialist Officials
Nazi
Nazi European integration plans
Nazi Germany
Nazi ideology
Occupied Eastern Territories
Operation Barbarossa
Pearl Harbor
Peral Harbor
Prisoners of War
racial hierarchy
Reich Security Main Office
Reichsgruppe Industrie
Reichskommissariat Ostland
Russian State Military Archives
Second World War
Socialist Europe
Stalin
Stalingrad
State Secretary
The Allies
vA?lkisch thought
violence
War in the Pacific
War Time
wartime collaboration
Western Front
Winston Churchill
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138607736
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Throughout the Second World War, the term ‘Europe’ featured prominently in National Socialist rhetoric. This book reconstructs what Europe stood for in National Socialist Germany, analyses how the interplay of its defining elements changed dependent on the war, and shows that the new European order was neither an empty phrase born out of propaganda, nor was it anti-European. Tying in with long-standing traditions of German European, völkisch, and economic thinking, imaginations of a New Order became a central category in contemporary political and economic decision-making processes, justifying cooperation as well as exploitation, violence, and murder.

Raimund Bauer holds a master’s degree in Economic and Social History, Modern History and Political Sciences from the University of Mannheim and received his PhD from the Department of Politics, History, and International Relations at Loughborough University. His research interests and his publications focus on the intersections of ideas, politics, and economics in the modern history of Germany and Europe.

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