Art As Politics in the Third Reich

by
Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1999-02-01
Publisher(s): Univ of North Carolina Pr
List Price: $45.00

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Summary

The political elite of Nazi Germany perceived itself as a cultural elite as well. In ###Art as Politics in the Third Reich#, Jonathan Petropoulos explores the elite's cultural aspirations by examining both the formulation of a national aesthetic policy and the content of the private art collections held by high-ranking Nazis. He demonstrates that these leaders manipulated public policy and their own collecting patterns to articulate fundamental tenets of Nazi ideology.Petropoulos begins by tracing the evolution of official aesthetic policy, from the purges of museum staff and academics labeled as 'undesirable' in 1933 to the confiscation of Jewish-owned artworks in the late 1930s and the organized plundering of art from occupied areas during the war. He then reconstructs the collections of a dozen prominent Nazi officials -- including Hitler, Goring, Goebbels, Himmler, Speer, and Ribbentrop -- and argues that their private holdings defined their relationships to one another within the Nazi hierarchy in addition to reflecting their racist and nationalist beliefs. According to Petropoulos, art collecting offered the political elite a way to achieve legitimacy and social standing, thereby providing a common cultural language for the leaders of the Third Reich.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xiii(2)
A Note on Names, Titles, and Abbreviations xv(2)
Abbreviations and Acronyms xvii
Introduction 3(16)
PART I. ADMINISTERING ART The Competition for Cultural Control 19(160)
Chapter 1. The Establishment of the National Socialist Cultural Bureaucracy, 1933-1936
19(32)
Chapter 2. Degenerate Art and State Interventionism, 1936-1938
51(24)
Chapter 3. From Confiscation to Aryanization: The Radicalization of Cultural Policy, 1938-1939
75(25)
Chapter 4. Art and Avarice Abroad: The Advent of Nazi Plundering in Poland, the Baltic States, and the South Tyrol, 1939-1940
100(23)
Chapter 5. Occupation and Exploitation, 1940-1943
123(28)
Chapter 6. The Contraction of the Cultural Bureaucracy, 1943-1945
151(28)
PART II. COLLECTING ART The Certification of an Elite 179(129)
Chapter 7. An Overview of the Leaders' Collections and Methods of Acquisition
179(62)
Adolf Hitler
181(6)
Hermann Goring
187(8)
Joseph Goebbels
195(6)
Joachim von Ribbentrop
201(11)
Heinrich Himmler
212(8)
Baldur von Schirach
220(6)
Hans Frank
226(4)
Robert Ley
230(3)
Albert Speer
233(4)
Martin Bormann
237(2)
Arthur Seyss-Inquart
239(1)
Josef Burckel
239(2)
Chapter 8. Art Collecting as a Reflection of the National Socialist Leaders' Worldviews
241(21)
Chapter 9. Art Collecting and Interpersonal Relations among the National Socialist Elite
262(25)
Chapter 10. Art Collecting, Luxury, and the National Socialist Elite's Conception of Status
287(21)
Conclusion 308(6)
Appendix: Organizational Charts and Glossary of Key Figures 314(9)
Notes 323(62)
Bibliography 385(32)
Index 417

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