Abstract
From anthropological perspective, the appearance of the „New Man” resulted from externalization of the National Socialism ideology. The image evolved from the political process taking place on the turn of the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries in the Hohenzollern Empire, in the Weimar Republic, and finally, in the Third Reich. This way, by promoting education of the new generations grounded in the national philosophical anthropology, the Germans modified their own image. This modification concerned the exceptional Arian features of the German national physiognomy. Thus, the characteristic type of a human, which was exclusively attributed to German society, was formed. Ideologically the image of this anthropological type influenced the hygienic approach of the nation and it contributed to evolution of sterile genetic heritage. According to these anthropological directives the Homo Nordicus X Dinaricus type was distinguished, which consequently, in its assumptions led to indication of the Nordic race, the Nordids. From that point, a kind of breeding process of the „New Man” had been taking place, and it resulted in creation of new National-Socialist identity. The concept of the New and, since then, also Political Man was a clear evidence of this breeding process. The created ideal reflected ideological and educational methodology of formation of the future nation’s elite. National Socialism constituted a fertile ground for formation and exploitation of its potential. The cult of the body was a very significant aspect of education, in which the German physiognomy was affiliated with the Nordic race. In other words, the breeding process was conducted by forming the malleable model on the basis of an ideal design. The typology of the Germans as athletic blue-eyed and blond-haired strongmen was based on the conviction that the Nordic race was superior to other peoples of Europe. The purpose of this typology was not only to determine the features of the race but also to build its aesthetic visual reception. In this respect, the existence of the „New Man” was strongly determined by the reality of the 1933‒1945 period.
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