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To What Extent Was Germany A Totalitarian

State During The Third Reich Essay, Research Paper


To what extent was Germany a totalitarian state during the


Third Reich ??????????? In order to


answer this question it is important to first define the key phrase


?totalitarian state?.? According to


Fredrick, a totalitarian state must: attempt to control every part of people?s


lives, be a dictatorship with one party and one leader, have the country?s


media, economy and education system firmly under state control, and try to


control the social lives of its people. A totalitarian state may also tend to


be both militaristic and nationalistic. An alternative definition given by the Encyclopaedia


Britannica says: ?In the broadest sense,


totalitarianism is characterized by strong central rule that attempts to


control and direct all aspects of individual life through coercion and


repression. The state achieves popularity through a strong, charismatic


leader.? In order to answer the question,


each of the above points must be addressed and compared with the example of


Nazi Germany on order to decide to what extent Nazi Germany was a totalitarian


state. The Nazi Regime was unusual, and


far from being the well organised, disciplined regime it is often perceived to


be, Hitler ran Germany in a similar fashion to a medieval monarch.? Hitler was an all-powerful dictator but he


was lazy and ran the country from his mansion in Bavaria in a similar fashion


to a medieval court.? In order to get a


proposal passed as law, the party member would have to come to Bavaria, flatter


Hitler and then present his proposal.?


He despised paper work and often slept until midday, he thought of


himself as the visionary leader and he was quite content to be the visionary


figurehead and allow those under him to take care of the administration.? He never made appointments as he believed in


the principle of survival of the fittest and allowed a permanent battle to rage


beneath him.? He believed that if those


under him were allowed to fight for his approval then eventually the successful


group with a gifted leader would emerge victorious.? This group would, in Hitler?s opinion be the most talented as


they would have outwitted all their opponents.?


For this reason Hitler had four offices that claimed to represent him,


all of which fought for his attention and approval. This unusual system of


administration led to an unusual structure of individual power blocks, all


fighting for superiority.? This system


led to a limitation to the party?s control.?


The individual power blocks did not cooperate or communicate with each


other, and although the SS and the Gestapo were effective units of repression,


they were not as dominant in Germany as is often thought.? It was the reports given by the people of


Germany that allowed the Gestapo to make arrests and maintain effective


repression.? Through encouraging the


unsubstantiated gossip that spreads in any community and taking this as


concrete evidence, the Nazi party and more particularly the Gestapo were able


to maintain a degree of control over people?s everyday lives.? However, I would argue that the system was


only partially efficient as the reliance on unsubstantiated gossip and a lack


of real facts must inevitably lead to the conclusion that there were things


that the gossip missed within any community.?


The degree of control of people?s lives, therefore, was extremely limited.? However, the state certainly did set out to


control every aspect of people?s lives. The control the Nazis exercised


in other areas was also limited.? The


education system introduced by the Nazis was unusual.? The emphasis upon physical excellence and militarist drill was


resented by many, along with the blatant attempt by the party to indoctrinate


Germany?s youth through emphasising nationalist principles and showing the


party in a wholly positive light.? The


Hitler youth was often seen as positive, but in fact it has been shown that


education standards fell in Germany due to the increased emphasis on the


physical aspect.? Although in many ways


there was a strict control of the education system by the Nazis, the ability of


the system introduced to indoctrinate the youth of Germany was limited, and in


many cases succeeded only in isolating the new generation, the control here was


limited.? The economic ideas held by


Hitler, in general, lacked direction and purpose. He had no clear economic aims


and ambitions.? He concerned himself


little with economic matters; he was more concerned by ensuring that the


country was ready for war.? However,


initially he did have the insight not to attempt to run the economy himself and


left it up to the president of the Reichsbank, Schacht to fulfil this


role.? It is ironic that the area in


which the Nazi party itself had little or no input into was the area in which


they had the greatest success.? It was


Schacht who engineered the economic recovery of 1933-36, his policy of


encouraging public investment whilst lowering interest rates and taxes laid the


foundations for economic recovery.? His


later ?New Plan? solved the problem of increasing debts due to greater imports


than exports.? It was his insight and


expertise that allowed the economic recovery to take place; Hitler?s later


policies were not as successful. Schacht made the economic improvements


possible, however, the recovery in Germany was aided by a recovery worldwide


after the Wall Street crash of 1929.? At


this stage, the economy was controlled by the Nazis, but through non-Nazi


management. However, although the better economical management aided the Nazis


in their objectives, they were not essential to success.? Hitler essentially was willing to ignore


economical matters during the war as he felt that if he could gain enough


territory, Germany?s economic difficulties would cease to be a problem as he


would be able to drain capital from the territories that he intended to gain.


The introduction of 4 year plan showed that it was the war rather than the


economy that was the Nazis first priority.?


Essentially, Schacht had glossed over the real economic problems through


a series of financial tricks, in order to address the real problems the


government needing to raise taxes and more importantly, cut expenditure, and


with a growing military deemed vital to the survival of the Third Reich, the


good of the economy was of secondary importance. The result was that the


economy after temporary recovery was managed in a fairly shambolic manner after


the resignation of Schacht in 1937. The one area in which the Nazis


were in complete control was in the area of the media.? Goebbles was instrumental in the rise of the


Nazis and in the manipulation of public opinion whilst they were in power.? His censorship of the media and the


propaganda pumped out by his organisation was essential in the manipulation of


public opinion to be favourable towards the Nazi party.? His total control of the media was vital in


the total control of Germany.? In short,


his ability to organise and distribute propaganda was an essential factor in


the maintenance of Nazi control. It is interesting to note that


under these criteria, Nazi Germany can certainly be considered to be a


totalitarian sate to a certain extent.?


The State, under Nazi rule, attempted to control every element of the


lives of its people through brutal repression of certain types of people.? The allegations had very little substantial


evidence in support of them, however, through encouraging idle gossip and


treating it as factual evidence, the Gestapo were able to arrest many people


that may have resisted Nazi policy.?


Furthermore, the Nazis encouraged the Arian race to interbreed to make a


superior race whilst discriminating against homosexuals and Jews.? This again shows an attempt at control.? The Nazis, despite measures such as these,


were not wholly successful in their control of people?s lives and there remained


resistance to Nazi rule among the people of Germany.? If this resistance was limited, it was due to the fact that the


Nazis appeared to be bringing prosperity back to Germany when it was needed


most whilst inspiring the German patriotism that had been lost in the wake of


Versailles.? It was from this that


Hitler?s popularity stemmed.? However,


on the whole, people supported Hitler out of free choice rather than through


oppression and fear. Furthermore, in education and the economy, the Nazis


attempted complete control, but in many ways, despite their best efforts,


complete control was never obtained due to difficult circumstances.? In the case of education, the indoctrination


became increasing obvious and people rather than submitting to it, became


actively opposed to it.? In the case of


the economy, despite Schacht?s best efforts to hide the problems, increased


expenditure meant that the Nazis lost control.?


The media, however, remained firmly under the control of Goebbles. In


addition to these factors, Nazi Germany was violently Nationalist, very


militarist and concerned with patriotism.?


Nazi Germany was led by one party in the Nazi party, all opposition


having being abolished, and one strong leader in Adolf Hitler. Under the


criteria set out by Fredrick then, it is clear that one can conclude that the


Nazi party set out to achieve a totalitarian state, and although they were


largely successful, there were elements of Nazi rule that were far from


totalitarian due to a lack of unity and purpose within the party, the desire of


the party to stage a European war at all costs and the people?s resistance to


the totalitarian system due to a lack of control over peoples lives. However, it is difficult to


define a totalitarian state.? The phrase


came into being during the cold war, when sweeping statements defined Hitler?s


Germany, Stalin?s Russia and Mao?s China as ?totalitarian? states.? The meaning of the word is ambiguous and at


the beginning of this essay, two examples were given of slightly differing


definitions.? Under the second


definition, the Nazi party could not be described as ?strong central rule? as


their was limited unity of purpose, but in so far as there was one leader who


controlled the policies, the rule was centralised and to a certain extent


strong.? The Nazi party certainly


attempted to use coercion and repression to control people?s everyday lives and


Hitler was an extremely charismatic leader who gained much popularity within


Germany. Therefore, under this definition, the Nazi state can be considered


totalitarian to a greater extent. If one takes the definitions as


correct, Fredrick?s being the better definition, then the Nazi rule was


partially totalitarian and certainly set out to be so.? However, the phrase a ?totalitarian state?


is too general and too vague to be a satisfactory definition of Nazi


Germany.? It would perhaps be better to


look at Nazi Germany as a regime and analyse it in that respect rather than


attempting to force it into a mould for a certain type of state.? In this way Nazi Germany was different from


anything that had been before and different again from anything that has come


since, and therefore deserves to be analysed as a state in its own right rather


than being but in the ?box? of ?totalitarian states?. ? ?

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