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Anti-Intellectualism in Nazi Germany

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Title: Anti-Intellectualism in Nazi Germany


1
Anti-Intellectualism in Nazi Germany
  • Based on a PowerPoint by David S, Horace Greeley
    High School

2
INTRODUCTION
3
What is Anti-Intellectualism?
  • Anti-intellectualism is expressed as hostility
    towards, or mistrust of, intellectuals and
    intellectual pursuits.
  • It attacks merits of science, education,
    literature.
  • Anti-intellectuals often see themselves as
    champions of the ordinary man.
  • They are against academic elitism, often arguing
    that highly educated people from an isolated
    social group are dominating political discourse
    and higher education (academia).

4
Consequences of Anti-Intellectualism
  • It fosters a society where individual thought is
    discouraged and the worth of the truth is
    minimal.
  • Authorities have more power
  • They cant be challenged, because there is no
    intellectual spirit of dissent

5
Consequences of Anti-Intellectualism
  • Emergence of Pseudoscience
  • (i.e. Eugenics)
  • Rewriting of History
  • Destruction of Literature

6
Nazi Anti-Intellectualism
  • Knowledge that benefited state was allowed (i.e.
    rocket science)
  • Individual learning was frowned upon
  • Independent thinking goes against public opinion
  • Propaganda a new form of education
  • Repression of the truth in favour of that which
    stirs up radical emotion

7
CENTRAL QUESTION
  • Why was anti-intellectualism such a critical
    element in sustaining Nazi culture from 1933-1945?

8
NAZI BOOK BURNINGS
9
Why burn books?
  • A way of venting anger
  • Symbolic transition of cultural values
  • Intellectualism to radical emotionalism
  • Unifies community in a ritual
  • Intimidates intellectual community
  • Frightening to see an angry mob that has lost
    touch with your values

10
The Burning of the Books
  • May 10, 1933
  • Nazi Party declares that any book which acts
    subversively on our future or strikes at the root
    of German thought, the German home and the
    driving forces of our people... is to be burned.
  • Jewish intellectuals were primary target, but
    also many non-Jews as well

11
The Burning of the Books
  • Students marched through the streets rampaging
    libraries, synagogues, and even private homes to
    loot books
  • Books were thrown onto bonfire

12
The Burning of the Books
  • Nazis encouraged burnings, but discouraged
    publicising the burnings
  • Aftermath
  • Frightened many intellectuals, Jewish and
    non-Jewish, many fled Germany
  • Jewish intellectualism is deadJoseph Goebbels
    after the 1933 book Burning

13
Some Authors of Books Burned on 5/10/33
  • Albert Einstein
  • Havelock Ellis
  • Lion Feuchtwanger
  • Sigmund Freud
  • André Gide
  • Franz Kafka
  • Erich Kästner
  • Helen Keller
  • Alfred Kerr
  • Jack London
  • Heinrich Mann
  • Thomas Mann
  • Karl Marx
  • Hugo Preuss
  • Marcel Proust
  • Walter Rathenau
  • Erich Maria Remarque
  • Margaret Sanger
  • Arthur Schnitzler
  • Upton Sinclair
  • Jakob Wasserman
  • H. G. Wells
  • Stefan Zweig
  • Emile Zola

14
EDUCATION INTHE THIRD REICH
Two Jewish students are humiliated in front of
their whole class. The writing on the board
proclaims the Jew is our greatest enemy! Beware
of the Jew!"
15
The Nazi Classroom
  • The Curriculum
  • Racial biology and eugenics
  • Celebratory German history
  • Discipline, duty, obedience, courage
  • Physical training Body over mind
  • No concern for the spirit of academics

The Jewish Nose is Wide at the End and Looks
like the Number Six
16
The Nazi Classroom
  • Task of the Educator
  • Strengthen the soul and spirit of youth
  • Instill nationalism in younger generation
  • Prepare students for service, and even
    self-sacrifice to the Reich
  • NO INTENTION OF EDUCATING THE INDIVIDUAL FOR THE
    SAKE OF THE INDIVIDUAL

17
The Nazi Classroom
  • Strong desire to destroy the values of
  • Liberal individualism
  • Rationalism
  • Intellectualism

18
The Nazi Classroom
  • Girls and boys were taught that they had clear
    roles in German society
  • Boys would go on to be soldiers and fight for
    their country.
  • It was the girls duty to become mothers and
    produce the next generation of soldiers.

19
The Nazi Classroom
  • Physical fitness was highly prized
  • If you were fit you could produce lots of
    children.
  • If you were fit you could become a soldier and
    fight for your country.

20
The Nazi Classroom
  • Antisemitism
  • German children were taught that the Jews were
    responsible for many of the problems Germany was
    facing.
  • They were taught that the Jews were an inferior
    race. Slavs, gay, Roma (Gypsy), mentally and
    physically disabled people, Jehovas witnesses,
    black people and children of mixed marriages were
    also seen as unter-menschen sub humans

21
Reasons for this Education System
  • Trained children to be good soldiers
  • Easier to accept a total authority if you dont
    know how to think for yourself
  • Ultimate Goal
  • In Democracy Student learns so he may benefit
    himself
  • In Totalitarian Germany Student learns so he may
    benefit the state

22
Adolf Hitler on Education
  • "Universal education is the most corroding and
    disintegrating poison that liberalism has ever
    inventedAdolf Hitler
  • "Through clever and constant application of
    propaganda, people can be made to see paradise as
    hell, and also the other way roundAdolf Hitler

23
Adolf Hitler on Education
  • "The folkish state must not adjust
    itseducational workto the inoculation of mere
    knowledge, but to the breeding of absolutely
    healthy bodiesAnd here again, first place must
    be taken by the development of character,
    especially the promotion of will-power and
    determination, combined with the training of joy
    in responsibility, and only in last place comes
    scientific schooling." Mein Kampf

24
The Hitler Youth (HJ)
25
Clip From Triumph of the Will
  • Click image to see video on YouTube
  • Notice direction of film
  • Shows how admired Hitler is
  • Promotes radical emotionalism
  • Notice serious faces, militarism of young boys

26
Why was the HJ Necessary for Nazi Germany?
  • Hitler believed the future of Nazi Germany was in
    its children
  • Composed of a generation that knew almost only
    Nazism
  • No need to suppress individual thinking if people
    are imprinted with anti-intellectual ideology at
    a young age

27
Why was the HJ Necessary for Nazi Germany?
  • Trained children for their roles as Nazi citizens
  • Men Wehrsport (Military training)
  • Women Preparation for Aryan motherhood

28
Hitlers View of the HJ
  • The weak must be chiseled away. I want young men
    and women who can suffer pain...
  • "I will have no intellectual training. Knowledge
    is ruin to my young men

29
Relevance of the HJ toAnti-Intellectualism
  • The values of a culture result from the values
    instilled in its youth
  • In Europe pressure to do well in school, get a
    job, make money
  • In Nazi Germany Children were worth only what
    they contributed to the state

30
Social Atmosphere in anAnti-Intellectual Germany
31
Nazi Populism
  • Whoever can conquer the street will one day
    conquer the state...Joseph Goebbels
  • Struggle against privileged elite
  • Especially Jews
  • Intellectuals are elitists and tricksters
  • Hoodwink opponents with rhetoric

32
The Ministry for Popular Enlightenment and
Propaganda
  • Spread and enforced Nazi ideology
  • The antithesis of intellectual-based culture
  • Rampant anti-Semitism
  • Infected all mediums of art and literature

33
Why have aMinistry of Propaganda?
  • In a totalitarian regime, public opinion must be
    molded to fit the state
  • In contrast, Intellectualism would demand
  • Tolerance of dissent
  • Ability to question authority
  • Independent thought
  • Formulation of rational ideas

34
KristallnachtNight of the Broken Glass
  • Political assassination by Jew ignites spark
  • Nazi youth destroys Jewish buildings
  • Considered beginning of Holocaust

35
Joseph GoebbelsHead of the Anti-intellectual
Serpent
36
Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels
  • Head of Ministry for Popular Enlightenment and
    Propaganda
  • A textbook example of the anti-intellectualism he
    promoted
  • Extreme, unconditional loyalty to Hitler he was
    practically in love with him

37
Goebbels on Truth and Intellectualism
  • Intellectual activity is a danger to the
    building of character
  • It is the absolute right of the State to
    supervise the formation of public opinion.
  • Not every item of news should be published.
    Rather must those who control news policies
    endeavour to make every item of news serve a
    certain purpose.

38
The Big Lie Theory
  • If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating
    it, people will eventually come to believe it.
    The lie can be maintained only for such time as
    the State can shield the people from the
    political, economic and/or military consequences
    of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for
    the State to use all of its powers to repress
    dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the
    lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the
    greatest enemy of the State.Joseph Goebbels

39
CONCLUSIONS
40
What Anti-intellectualism Does
  • A force that seeks to unify
  • The mind of a nation
  • The will of a nation
  • Censorship of truth
  • Idea that truth is irrelevant is dangerous
  • Use of propaganda to direct public opinion

41
Karl Rove (Bush adviser) on Intellectualism
  • As people do better, they start voting like
    Republicansunless they have too much education
    and vote Democratic, which proves there can be
    too much of a good thingKarl Rove

42
The End(or is it?)
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