Bridgewater State University ♦ Maxwell Library - 3rd Floor
Bridgewater, MA 02325
March 17, 2009 through May 3, 2009
The Center for Legislative
Studies is pleased to announce that the United States Holocaust Museum
traveling exhibit entitled Fighting the Fires of Hate: America and the Nazi
Book Burnings is currently on display on the third floor of the Maxwell
Library for public viewing. This exhibit focuses on how the book burnings
became a potent symbol during World War II in Americas battle against
Nazism, and concludes by examining their continued impact on our public
discourse.
The exhibit is co-sponsored by the Center for Legislative Studies; as well
as the Anthropology, Political Science, Music, and Sociology departments and
the Office of Academic Affairs.
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FIGHTING THE FIRES OF HATE: AMERICA AND THE NAZI BOOK BURNINGSFor Americans, the iconography of Nazism is found in the swastika, the jackboot, the Nazi banner. But another symbol - flames and fire - accompanied the Third Reich from its strident inception to its apocalyptic demise. On January 30, 1933, torchlight parades announced the onset of the Nazi revolution. One month later, the flames of the Reichstag fire consumed the last vestiges of the Weimar Constitution. On May 10, 1933, German university students launched an "Action Against the Un-German Spirit" targeting authors ranging from Helen Keller and Ernest Hemingway to Sigmund Freud. Americans quickly condemned the book burnings as antithetical to the democratic spirit. The exhibition Fighting the Fires of Hate: America and the Nazi Book Burnings focuses on how the book burnings became a potent symbol during World War II in America's battle against Nazism, and concludes by examining their continued impact on our public discourse. |
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For more information go to: http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/traveling/details/index.php?type=current&content=fighting_the_fire_bookburning
Last Modified: April 29, 2011