Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
TOTALITARIAN REGIMES - Coggle Diagram
TOTALITARIAN REGIMES
Totalitarian Regimes Share Common Features
They all idealised a "New Man"
German Aryan Race
The Worker & the Kolkhoz Woman
Purging society to escape a state of economic, social, political
and identity crisis
The state was all-powerful and tolerated no political opposition
Mussolini's "Grand Council of Fascism"
From December 1925 to April 1926, the Fascist Laws established a totalitarian regime
On the Night of the Long Knives (
June-July 1934
) , the SA was purged by the SS
Both society and economy was controlled by the state
Hitlerjugend
NKVD, OVRA, Gestapo
IG Farben, Audi
Three Different Regimes During WW2
Italian Fascism
Roman Empire, virile, aggressive and conquering
1938 anti-Semitic measures, one of the lowest deportation to population ratios in Europe
Italian monarchy was never threatened
German National Socialism
Aryan race, pseudo-Darwinism
Nuremberg Laws of September 1935, 1938 "Kristallnacht" November Pogrom
Aktion T4, Untermensch
Soviet Communism
dictatorship of the proletariat, a communist and classless society
"Industrialization, planning, collectivization", Stakhanovism
Holodomor genocide, 1932-33, about 4 million victims
Totalitarianism Led to WW2
Cult of war
Enlistment, Hitlerjugend, SS
Revenge from Versaille, Lebensraum
Spanish Civil war
1936 Frente Popular
1937 bombing of Guernica
1938 bombing of Barcelona