Transnational and entangled histories of National Socialism? The Turkish dimension of German interwar history

The history of National Socialism is mostly narrated and researched within its national, German context. While it appears obvious that Germany was interconnected with the broader world at the time, this has had little impact on our understanding of the history of National Socialism. This article inv...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ihrig, Stefan
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Editura ARC 2016-12-01
Series:Plural: History, Culture, Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://plural.upsc.md/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/02-IHRIG.pdf
Description
Summary:The history of National Socialism is mostly narrated and researched within its national, German context. While it appears obvious that Germany was interconnected with the broader world at the time, this has had little impact on our understanding of the history of National Socialism. This article investigates the Turkish dimension of especially early National Socialism and shows how debates on Turkey and recent events there influenced and shaped debates in the German media in the early Weimar republic. The Turkish War of Independence (1919-1923) as well as the Armenian Genocide during World War I Turkey were topics of public debate in the early Weimar Republic. While this seems surprising, if not unlikely at first, it is through translation of these events into wholly German terms and dimensions that they became highly relevant to Germany at the time. This is a contribution to entangled history and media history as it proposes a new way to understand international history and influences through public debates, news coverage, and political discourse.
ISSN:2345-1262
2345-184X