Becoming a Nazi town : cultural and politics in Göttingen between the world wars

Author(s)

    • Imhoof, David Michael

Bibliographic Information

Becoming a Nazi town : cultural and politics in Göttingen between the world wars

David Imhoof

(Social history, popular culture, and politics in Germany)

University of Michigan Press, c2013

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 241-258) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Becoming a Nazi Town reveals the ways in which ordinary Germans changed their cultural lives and their politics from the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s. Casting the origins of Nazism in a new light, David Imhoof charts the process by which Weimar and Nazi culture flowed into each other. He analyses this dramatic transition by looking closely at three examples of everyday cultural life in the mid-sized German city of Goettingen: sharpshooting, an opera festival, and cinema. Imhoof draws on individual and community experiences over a series of interwar periods to highlight and connect shifts in culture, politics, and everyday life. He demonstrates how Nazi leaders crafted cultural policies based in part on homegrown cultural practices of the 1920s and argues that overdrawn distinctions between "Weimar" and "Nazi" culture did not always conform to most Germans' daily lives. Further, Imhoof presents experiences in Goettingen as a reflection of the common reality of many German towns beyond the capital city of Berlin.

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