History, asked by anishnotes77p9mpt9, 1 year ago

Explain the ideology of Nazism

Answers

Answered by LavishKumar
29
Nazi stands for 'Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei', or National Socialist German Workers Party. Nazism took the Socialist idea of the community and applied it on a nationalist scale. The Nazi party wanted to unify Germany under a collective purpose. The leader of the Nazi Party was Adolf Hitler, and he established the ideology of Nazism.

Nazi ideology can be defined in four parts: expansion, racial purity, power, and militarism. Each one explains a specific part to the philosophy of Nazism.


LavishKumar: Thanks
Answered by rimidutta
11
Nazism is a form offascismand showed that ideology's disdain forliberal democracyand theparliamentary system, but also incorporated ferventantisemitism,scientific racism, andeugenicsinto its creed. Its extremenationalismcame fromPan-Germanismand theVölkisch movementprominent in theGerman nationalismof the time, and it was strongly influenced by theanti-CommunistFreikorpsparamilitarygroups that emerged after Germany's defeat inWorld War I, from which came the party's "cult of violence" which was "at the heart of the movement."
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