Abstract
The article examines Austria’s economy under National Socialism from a socioecological
perspective that combines materialist and culturalist approaches.
Questioning the caesura of the ‘backbreak’ in 1945 and the ‘Great Acceleration’
around 1950, the article emphasizes the comparatively strong acceleration of the
appropriation of key resources for the autarky and armament economy – mineral
fertilizer, crude oil, aluminium and rayon – already during the Nazi period.
The productivist resource mobilization pursued by the Nazi regime and German
corporations met with loud but rather ineffective protest from conservationist
activists who defended their image of the landscape as a ‘garden’. In the long run,
the acceleration of resource flows in the Nazi period was embedded in Austria’s
petro-industrial transition from the 1930s to the 1950s: as the forerunner (‘Little
Acceleration’) or even the onset of the ‘Great Acceleration’ of material and energy
flows that came into full effect in the postwar period, interrupted by the economic
shock of the change of the political regime in 1945.
| Translated title of the contribution | Interrupted Acceleration: Austria’s Economy under the Nazi Regime from a Socioecological Perspective |
|---|---|
| Original language | German (Austria) |
| Pages (from-to) | 167-192 |
| Number of pages | 26 |
| Journal | zeitgeschichte |
| Volume | 50 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jun 2023 |
Fields of science
- 502049 Economic history
- 504026 Social history
- 601 History, Archaeology
JKU Focus areas
- Sustainable Development: Responsible Technologies and Management
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