Stein Barth-Heyerdahl
Stein Barth-Heyerdahl (1909 – 1972) was a Norwegian art painter and national socialist.[1] A reluctant member of Nasjonal Samling (NS) briefly after its founding in 1933–34 and from 1941, he was mostly active in the National Socialist Workers' Party of Norway (NNSAP) during the 1930s.[1] He was editor of the short-lived NNSAP-paper Nasjonalsocialisten in 1934–35.[2] Barth-Heyerdahl lived in Berlin for extended periods during World War II, and became part of the circle around the NS-critical periodical Ragnarok, which espoused pan-German and neopagan ideologies.[1] Along with Per Imerslund, he was one of Norway's strongest proponents of racialist pagan ideas.[3]
References
- 1 2 3 Sørensen, Øystein (1989). Hitler eller Quisling?: ideologiske brytninger i Nasjonal samling 1940-1945 (in Norwegian). Cappelen. pp. 76–78. ISBN 8202119928.
- ↑ Jensen, Tom B. (1992). Nasjonal samlings periodiske skrifter 1933-1945: en bibliografi (in Norwegian). Grafisk Media. pp. 60–61. ISBN 8276950000.
- ↑ Emberland, Terje (2003). Religion og rase: nyhedenskap og nazisme i Norge 1933-1945 (in Norwegian). Humanist forlag. p. 139. ISBN 9788290425536.
Further reading
- Emberland, Terje: Religion og Rase: Nyhedenskap og Nazisme i Norge 1933-1945. Humanist Forlag AS 2003. ISBN 9788290425536
- Emberland, Terje and Roughthvedt, Bernt: Det ariske idol. Aschehoug, 2004. ISBN 82-03-22964-6
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