NATIONAL BOLSHEVISM.
Publié le 22/02/2012
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A nebulous phenomenon, National Bolshevism
surfaced in 1919 among members of Hamburg's KPD and recurred at
intervals (e.g., 1923 and 1930) throughout the Weimar era. Associated chiefly
with the preindustrial Mittelstand,* it was marked by implacable hostility toward
the bourgeoisie and enchantment with Russia. Linked variously to the radical
Right and Left, it aimed to bridge the gap between political extremes, thus
forming a national front against the Republic and the Western Allies. Karl Radek,
Lenin's agent in Berlin,* was enthralled when the concept was introduced
to him during his 1919 imprisonment (Lenin dubbed it a heresy). Ernst Niekisch,*
the erstwhile socialist most associated with it, later recalled that he
sought to attract middle-class youth to an antibourgeois stance that celebrated
the old military caste and appealed to national idealism.
In a 1932 Weltbu¨hne* article Kurt Hiller* coined the term linke Leute von
Rechts (‘‘leftists of the Right''), an expression of the ideological affinity certain
leftists felt for the Right. Hiller's concept is useful, for although National Bolsheviks
might identify themselves with one of several Communist groups, their
ideology was less Marxist than anti-Western and less tied to the Soviet Union*
than bent on annulling Versailles. Arthur Moeller* van den Bruck, deemed its
key theorist, wrote of uniting Germany in ‘‘an alliance with Russia and of
playing the revolutionary East against the capitalist West.'' While such rhetoric
mirrored Nazi slogans, National Bolshevism was more a state of mind than a
movement.
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