Vecinos a muerte: SA y violencia política en Berlín-Kreuzberg, 1929-1933
Keywords:
violencia política, nacionalsocialismo, SA, República de WeimarAbstract
Junto con los comunistas, los nazis fueron los principales protagonistas del clima de guerra civil latente que se vivió en Alemania en los años finales de la República de Weimar. Sus fuerzas de choque, las Unidades de Asalto o SA, contribuyeron a alimentar una violencia capilar y mimética en el conjunto del país. En el presente trabajo se analiza la violencia entre "enemigos políticos" en un barrio de la capital alemana. A partir de documentos de archivos, prensa y literatura de la época se ilustra la cotidianeidad y escalamiento de la violencia, desde agresiones y trifulcas callejeras y sin consecuencias fatales hasta la muerte de dos activistas de las SA en el barrio de Nostitz, el enclave berlinés en el que focalizamos el estudio. El envenenamiento de las relaciones comunitarias en dicho barrio ilustra la confrontación política que caracterizó al país en los años que precedieron a la toma del poder por los nazis en 1933.Downloads
Downloads
Additional Files
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2016 Jesús Casquete
![Creative Commons License](http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/4.0/88x31.png)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Authors whose contributions are accepted for publication in this journal, accept the following terms:
a. The authors retain their copyright and guarantee to the magazine the right of first publication of their work, which will be simultaneously subject to the Creative Commons Attribution License Attribution-Noncommercial-No derivative works 4.0 Spain, which allows third parties to share the work as long as its author and its first publication is indicated.
b. Authors may adopt other non-exclusive license agreements to distribute the version of the published work (e.g. deposit in an institutional repository or archive, or published in a monographic volume) provided the initial publication in this journal is indicated.
PLAGIARISM AND SCIENTIFIC FRAUD
The publication of work that infringes on intellectual property rights is the sole responsibility of the authors, including any conflicts that may occur regarding infringement of copyright. This includes, most importantly, conflicts related to the commission of plagiarism and/or scientific fraud.
Plagiarism is understood to include:
1. Presenting the work of others as your own.
2. Adopting words or ideas from other authors without due recognition.
3. Not using quotation marks or another distinctive format to distinguish literal quotations.
4. Giving incorrect information about the true source of a citation.
5. The paraphrasing of a source without mentioning the source.
6. Excessive paraphrasing, even if the source is mentioned.
Practices constituting scientific fraud are as follows:
1. Fabrication, falsification or omission of data and plagiarism.
2. Duplicate publication.
3. Conflicts of authorship.