The Rise and Fall of Ernst Röhm: Männerbund, National Revolution, and the Coming of the Third Reich

Date
-
Event Sponsor
The Europe Center, Department of German Studies, History Department
Location
Lane History Corner, room 302

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The Rise and Fall of Ernst Röhm: Männerbund, National Revolution, and the Coming of the Third Reich

A talk by Robert Beachy

Ernst Röhm (1887-1934) was an early member of the Nazi Party and Hitler’s closest friend.  As head of the Nazi SA (Sturmabteilung), Röhm was one of the most powerful men in the Third Reich, at least until his execution during the “Night of Long Knives” in the summer of 1934.  Röhm was also openly homosexual.   This talk considers Röhm’s rise, the disclosure of his homosexuality in 1931 in two widely-publicized trials (for violation of the anti-sodomy statute), his role in the consolidation of Nazi control, and his downfall.  The talk also considers how Hans Blüher’s theory of the Männerbund (male association) might help analyze not only Röhm and the Nazis but also contribute more broadly to the historical sociology of nationalist revolution.

This event is open to the Stanford community.

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