The Cold War began almost immediately after the end of World War II
and the defeat of the Nazis in Europe. As images of the Nazis’
atrocities became part of American culture’s common store, the evil
of their old enemy, beyond the Nazis as a wartime opponent, became
increasingly important. As America tried to describe the danger
represented by the spread of Communism, it fell back on descriptions
of Nazism to make the threat plain through comparison. At the heart of
the tensions of that era lay the inconsistency of using one kind of
evil to describe another. The book addresses this tension in regards
to McCarthyism, campaigns to educate the public about Communism,
attempts to raise support for wars in Asia, and the rhetoric of civil
rights. Each of these political arenas is examined through their use
of Nazi analogies in popular, political, and literary culture.
The Nazi Card is an invaluable look at the way comparisons to Nazis
are used in American culture, the history of those comparisons, and
the repercussions of establishing a political definition of evil.
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Nazi Comparisons at the Beginning of the Cold War
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9798216316985
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter