The Conservative Revolution During the Weimar Republic and its Impact on the Young German Generation in the Years 1919–1933 Cover Image

The Conservative Revolution During the Weimar Republic and its Impact on the Young German Generation in the Years 1919–1933
The Conservative Revolution During the Weimar Republic and its Impact on the Young German Generation in the Years 1919–1933

Author(s): Tomasz Butkiewicz
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, History
Published by: Uniwersytet Jana Długosza w Częstochowie
Keywords: Conservative Revolution;Weimar Republic;militarism;World War II;“new man”;Third Reich

Summary/Abstract: In the historical and political literature we will not encounter such a diverse and, in its impact, individually ambiguous term as the “conservative revolution”. Although it is possible to place itwithin one of its creators, in the application of its practices we will come across many substantivediscrepancies. This is certainly due to the creative idea of the people and the language that therevolutionaries used. In the basis of this historical-political dialogue, although the dissertation isconcerned only with the period of the Weimar Republic, we can see the changes already takingplace in the second half of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Thus to this day Friedrich Nietzsche isregarded as the spiritual father of the “conservative revolution”. The cult of the “superman” (Übermensch) he created (Übermensch) broke the ties with the hitherto values of Christianity in favour of crossing out God's universe in the world. For many intellectuals, it represented a theoretical-cognitive pluralism in the recording of moral tables for modern humanity. Nietzschean nihilism,as a construct of the “superman”, uprooted youth from bourgeois structures, and thusfrom their duty of service to their elders, guiding them towards the heroic realm. In its dimension,it overcame the statu quo of the time in favour of renewal and liberation towards the inner evolutionof the “superman”. It resulted from the constant struggle and persistence of a reality whichthe “superman” then created himself.The significance of the Nietzschean construct for the fundamental ideas of the “conservativerevolution” was best summed up by Thomas Mann. In his original reflections on the apoliticalman, he shattered the previous norms of political structure in favour of the heroism awakening inyouth. Subsequent intellectuals who were unquestionably counted among the founders of therevolutionary idea of the Weimar period agreed with this thought: Ernst Jünger, Ernst Julius Jung,Carl Schmidt, Wilhelm Stapel. The acolyte of the young revolutionaries' thought became the First World War. It broke the link with the pre-industrial mentality in favour of militant-apologists, from whom a new state elite was to crystalise. It was to create a hierarchy of cadres based on society.Thus, among the soldiers on the battlefield, the idea of defence of the homeland and sacrifice on the altar of war was born. Internally, it created an anthropology and philosophy of war to whichthe German youth was called. This sense of struggle was to evolve from defeat into a new different Germany: “we had to lose the war in order to win Germany”. The National Socialists, after comingto power in 1933, were keen to use the educational concept of the „conservative revolution” and the youth organizations of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Nazi pedagogy drew on these reservoirs as a model for creating the Third Reich's ideal of the “new man”.

  • Issue Year: 13/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 83-101
  • Page Count: 19
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode