1) Authoritarian States: A) Conservative Authoritarianism
1) Authoritarian States: A) Conservative Authoritarianism
1) Authoritarian States: A) Conservative Authoritarianism
1) Authoritarian States
a) Conservative authoritarianism
i) Authoritarian states were severely weakened from traditional European history. ii) Conservative authoritarianism revived after the First World War esp. in Eastern Europe. (1) Lacked a tradition of self government (2) Torn by ethnic conflicts (3) Totalitarian dictators appealed to nationalists, large landowners, and the church as a way to soothe tensions and repress large sweeping reforms.
Dang 2 (1) Allied with Trotsky's personal enemies and turned them against him. (2) Aligned with the moderates to suppress Trotsky's radical followers (3) After destroying the radicals, he turned against the moderates
Dang 3 iii) Marched on Rome in 1922 after government begins breaking down. Mussolini stepped forward, demanded the resignation of the king. Granted power for one year
a) German Nazism was a product of Hitler, of Germany's social and political crisis, and the general attack on liberalism and rationality.
i) Hitler became a fanatical nationalist while in Vienna, where he absorbed antiSemitic and racist ideas. ii) Blamed Jews and socialists entirely for the loss of World War one. iii) By 1921, he had reshaped the tiny extremist German Workers' group into the Nazi party, using the mass rally as a particularly effective tool of propaganda. (1) The party grew rapidly. (2) Hitler and the party attempted to overthrow the Weimar government, but he was defeated and sent to jail (1923).
ix) The communists welcomed Hitler as the last breath of monopoly capitalism. x) Government had already begun to break down by the time he seized power.
Dang 4
d) Hitler's popularity
i) Hitler promised and delivered economic recovery through public works projects and military spending. ii) Unemployment dropped steadily. Produced results unlike many other governments. The s.o.l increased moderately between 1932 and 1938. iii) Those who were t Jews, Slavs, Gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, communists, or homosexuals experienced few opportunities or equality. iv) Hitler reduced Germany's traditional class distinctions. (1) Yet few historians believe that Hitler brought on a real social revolution. Women still held in stereotypical positions. v) He reminded Germans of their expansionist heritage: Bismarck. Nationalism increased as his supporters did. vi) Many Christians opposed him, Trade unions and socialists were demolished by SS terror groups. Some high-ranking army officers plotted against him and failed.