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The anti-Semitic Policy of National Socialist Germany in the Manchu Development of Japan in the late 1930s

  • Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences
  • Abbr :
  • 2017, (54), pp.57-76
  • DOI : 10.17939/hushss.2017..54.004
  • Publisher : Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences
  • Research Area : Interdisciplinary Studies > Interdisciplinary Research
  • Received : December 26, 2016
  • Accepted : February 9, 2017
  • Published : February 28, 2017

Hwang, Ki Woo 1

1성균관대학교

Accredited

ABSTRACT

The principle of internal National Socialist cultural policies required adjusting Germany’s relations with Japan in the context of an uncompromising cultural imperialism. National Socialist propaganda necessitated the integration of anticommunism and anti-Semitism into the developing Germany-Japan alliance on the occasion of the Anti-Comintern Pact in 1936 and the cultural agreement of 1938. In the Tripartite Pact of 1940, the National Socialist government aimed to situate anti-Semitism as a crucial cultural and ideological principle of the Axis alliance. National Socialist and Axis policies towards Japan were devised with an eye on the narrow context of the increasing presence of Jewish refugees in the Japanese-controlled areas of Manchuria.

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