National Socialist Discourse Against "Nazi infiltration" in Argentina

From the mid-1930s diverse reports alerting about a National Socialist infiltration into Argentine territory, prepared for an eventual assault on the South American continent, have prospered. The propagandistic labor of militants from different German-speaking organizations that made up a motley loc...

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Autor principal: Friedmann, Germán
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Grupo Prohistoria 2019
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Acceso en línea:https://ojs.rosario-conicet.gov.ar/index.php/prohistoria/article/view/1106
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Sumario:From the mid-1930s diverse reports alerting about a National Socialist infiltration into Argentine territory, prepared for an eventual assault on the South American continent, have prospered. The propagandistic labor of militants from different German-speaking organizations that made up a motley local antifascist movement played a large part in their origin and dissemination. This article focuses on the discourse and interpretations of local National Socialists, for whom the denunciations of an omnipresent "Nazi threat" were part of a "defamation propaganda" of international news agencies that covered up what they considered to be the real threat of the "Jewish infiltration" and "Anglo-Yankee imperialism".