Atatürk in the Nazi Imagination

Less than two weeks before Adolf Hitler's failed putsch in Munich on 8−9 November 1923, the weekly Heimatland, officially the press organ of the “Deutsche Kampfbund” but also a paper closely related to the embryonic Nazi Party, called on its front page for the establishment of an “Ankara govern...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zürcher, Erik Jan (Author)
Format: Electronic Review
Language:English
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Published: Oxford University Press 2016
In: Holocaust and genocide studies
Year: 2016, Volume: 30, Issue: 3, Pages: 560-562
Review of:Atatürk in the Nazi imagination (Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2014) (Zürcher, Erik Jan)
Atatürk in the Nazi imagination (Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2014) (Zürcher, Erik Jan)
Further subjects:B Book review
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Summary:Less than two weeks before Adolf Hitler's failed putsch in Munich on 8−9 November 1923, the weekly Heimatland, officially the press organ of the “Deutsche Kampfbund” but also a paper closely related to the embryonic Nazi Party, called on its front page for the establishment of an “Ankara government” in Germany (“Her die Angora-Regierung!”). The paper argued that the revival of Germany could start only far away from the capital, in Bavaria, just as the Turkish nationalists of Mustafa Kemal (after 1934 Atatürk) had started their resistance movement against the imposed peace treaty of Sèvres from faraway Ankara, and not the former imperial capital of Constantinople (p. 88).
ISSN:1476-7937
Contains:Enthalten in: Holocaust and genocide studies
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1093/hgs/dcw074