The antisemitism of producers: Hitler and the ‘rhetoric of bourgeois revolution’

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  • stoetzler hitler CHS October 2023

    Accepted author manuscript, 481 KB, PDF document

    Embargo ends: 31/12/99

The article suggests that Nazi antisemitism inherited one of its key elements, the idea of the nation as a community of producers, from the tradition of modern bourgeois ideology as inaugurated in the period of the French Revolution, and that this element of continuity, the familiarity and ordinariness of one of its key ideas, can help explain its attractiveness to large constituencies across many political and social divides. This article first provides a detailed interpretation of the January 1939 Reichstag speech in which Adolf Hitler first publicly enunciated the genocide of European Jewry, focusing on one of its rhetorical highpoints, the phrase ‘Productive members of all nations, recognize your common foe!’. In a second step, the article contextualizes this speech in other writings by Hitler, including Mein Kampf, as well as selected sources of nineteenth-century antisemitism. In a third step, it relates it to the ‘rhetoric of bourgeois revolution’, which is how William Sewell referred to the strategic use of political ideas in Abbé Sieyes’ famous 1789 pamphlet, ‘What is the Third Estate?’.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages62
JournalCritical Historical Studies
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 15 Dec 2023
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