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Resumen de Creating a Capital for National Socialism: Sacred Spaces and Places of Power in Hitler's Berlin

Joshua A. Hagen

  • Soon after seizing power, the Nazy Party launche a variety of building programs intended to transform Germany according to its ideology and ultimately prepare the country for war. Among those initiatives, Nazi officials placed a special emphasis on commissioning monuments, memorials, and other places of memory that indoctrinated the masses into the movement's idelolgy of racial struggle, sacrifice, and martyrdom on behalf ot the party and nation. As the capital city, Berlin occupied a special place in these building programs that would eventually culminate in plans for the construction of massive architectural ensembles of commemorative spaces and places intended to shroud the Nazy movement within notions of the sacred. Althoug highly critical of traditional established religions and explicity rejecting cultic associations, the Nazy movement nevertheless drew heavily from ideas of the sacred and sacred places to fashion a political religion that conditioned the masses into unquestioning loyalty and obedience.


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