Nazi Agrarian Society 1938-1945
Nazi Agrarian Society 1938-1945
Disciplines
Other Humanities (20%); Sociology (50%); Economics (30%)
Keywords
-
Nazi Germany,
Agrarian Society,
Farming Style,
Agro-System,
Social Field,
Agraian Transition
Previous research on agrarian society in Nazi Germany has focused either on the regimes actions or the rural populations reactions. In order to overcome this opposition, this study concentrates on the fields of interaction between Nazi regime and rural population. Taking the province of Niederdonau in German-annexed Austria as an example, the study aims at answering the following questions: first, how did the actors use resources such as land, labour, capital, knowledge and products in their farming practice? Second, which power relations did the actors establish among themselves and with the instances of the political- economic system? Third, how were life-world, state and market regulation of farming related to each other? The investigation builds upon a diverse resource base, consisting of ego-, official and published documents, which is being interpreted with aid of qualitative and quantitative methods. The results correct and extend the current state of research on Austrian agrarian society in the Nazi era. Contrary to the conventional wisdom of the Nazi era as an interlude or step backwards on the way to modernity, the study outlines the contours of a Nazi megaproject directed towards an alternative modernity beyond liberalism and socialism: on the one hand, the peasantry as a backbone of the peoples body (Volkskörper) should be strengthened; on the other hand, farm productivity should be raised according to national autarky. The megaproject of racial productivism the creation of a both racial and technical productive peasant became effective at different levels of the agrosystem: At the technical level, only state-supported pioneer farms managed to raise land use intensity; the overwhelming majority tended to extensification due to lack of labourers and equipment. At the institutional level, the nation state was established as the central regulator of the agricultural sector from factor- and product markets to the actors habitus. Though agrarian modernization was intended by the Nazi decision-makers, it became only partially effective. Despite the Nazi regimes attempts, a green revolution in the full both technical and institutional sense did not take place in German-annexed Austria. However, the years 1938 to 1945 were a kind of pre-revolutionary transitional period, which passed on stable institutions for the technical take off of the agricultural revolution in postwar Austria. Though the great leap to racial productivism failed, the actors of the agrosystem took small steps along the productivist transition between the 1930s and 1950s.
- Institut für Geschichte des ländlichen Raumes - 100%