The Roots of National Socialism and Germany's Reckoning with its Past
Main Menu
By way of introduction
The Context: Germany in the 1920s and Early 1930s
And into this context there stepped one man . . .
Anti-Semitism was Central to Nazi Propaganda
Popular Sentiment: "At least Hitler isn't a Communist . . ."
Nazi Officials Use Propaganda to Win Popular Support
Nazis Pretend Life Goes on as Usual, Even in War
One of Six Million Jews Slaughtered by the Nazis: Edith Stein
What Psychologists Say about the Roots of Nazism
Jung's 1946 Essay "After the Catastrophe"
Germany's Reckoning with its Past
Some Provisional Conclusions
Works Cited
Creative Commons License
Cathy Kroll
0c0427ebd621fb54b22b23c07748d7202fcfe9c8
This is a user page for Cathy Kroll, but it hasn't been created yet.