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  2. Strasserism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strasserism

    Strasserism (German: Strasserismus) is an ideological strand of Nazism which adheres to revolutionary nationalism and to economic antisemitism, which conditions are to be achieved with radical, mass-action and worker-based politics that are more aggressive than the politics of the Hitlerite leaders of the Nazi Party.

  3. Black Front - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Front

    The Combat League of Revolutionary National Socialists (German: Kampfgemeinschaft Revolutionärer Nationalsozialisten, KGRNS), more commonly known as the Black Front (German: Schwarze Front), was a political group formed by Otto Strasser in 1930 after he resigned from the Nazi Party (NSDAP) to avoid being expelled.

  4. Nazi symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_symbolism

    Many symbols used by the Nazis have further been appropriated by neo-Nazi groups, including a number of runes; the so-called Black Sun, derived from a mosaic floor in Himmler's remodel of Wewelsburg; and the Celtic cross, originally a symbol used to represent pre-Christian and Christian European groups such as the Irish. [citation needed]

  5. Otto Strasser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Strasser

    Otto Johann Maximilian Strasser (also German: Straßer, see ß; 10 September 1897 – 27 August 1974) was a German politician and an early member of the Nazi Party.Otto Strasser, together with his brother Gregor Strasser, was a leading member of the party's more radical wing, whose ideology became known as Strasserism, and broke from the party due to disputes with the dominant Hitlerite faction.

  6. Third Position - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Position

    The term "Third Position" was coined in Europe and the main precursors of Third Position politics were Italian fascism, Legionarism, Falangism, Prussian socialism, National Bolshevism (a synthesis of far-right ultranationalism and far-left Bolshevism) and Strasserism (a radical, mass-action, worker-based form of Nazism, advocated by the "left ...

  7. Reactionary modernism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactionary_modernism

    Nazi German architecture mixing modernist design with the ancient Swastika symbol.. Reactionary modernism is a term first coined by Jeffrey Herf [1] in the 1980s to describe the mixture of "great enthusiasm for modern technology with a rejection of the Enlightenment and the values and institutions of liberal democracy" that was characteristic of the German Conservative Revolutionary movement ...

  8. Category:Strasserism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Strasserism

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  9. Gregor Strasser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregor_Strasser

    Gregor Strasser (also German: Straßer, see ß; 31 May 1892 – 30 June 1934) was a German politician and early leader of the Nazi Party.Along with his younger brother Otto, he was a leading member of the party's left-wing faction, which brought them into conflict with the dominant faction led by Adolf Hitler, resulting in his murder in 1934.