A Pivotal Primary Source on the Nazi “Blood and Soil” Ideology — Presented for Historical and Academic Study
“A New Nobility of Blood and Soil” is Richard Walther Darré’s most influential work and one of the central texts of the Nazi agrarian movement. Darré, an SS Obergruppenführer and Reich Minister of Food and Agriculture, advanced the infamous slogan “Blut und Boden”—“Blood and Soil”—to express the claimed interdependence of a people and the land they cultivate.
Originally published in 1930, the book became a bestseller in the Third Reich and shaped both rural policy and propaganda. Darré argued that Germany’s enduring strength lay with its peasant farmers, whom he portrayed as the true national elite—rooted in heritage, loyal to homeland, and resistant to what he called the excesses of capitalism and the decline of the old aristocracy. He envisioned a “new nobility” of hardworking agriculturalists who, through dedication to the soil, would counter urban alienation, low birth rates, and environmental decline.
This edition is offered strictly for scholarly and educational purposes:
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Historical Significance: Essential reading for understanding how agrarian ideals were harnessed to support National Socialist ideology and policy.
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Primary Source Material: Preserves the original arguments and rhetoric for researchers, historians, and educators analyzing the mechanisms of propaganda and authoritarianism.
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Contextual Value: Provides critical insight into how radical ideologies can merge environmental themes with nationalism.
Important Note: It is presented only for research, archival, and educational study.
Ideal For
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Historians and scholars of 20th-century Europe and totalitarian ideologies
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Academic libraries and archival collections
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Students and educators seeking primary sources for courses on propaganda, environmental politics, or the history of Nazi Germany
Sarah Winfield –
Much to think about. So beautifully written, luxurious prose. A joy to read, regardless of political persuasion.