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  1. Theodore Lothrop Stoddard (June 29, 1883 – May 1, 1950) was an American historian, journalist, political scientist and white supremacist. Stoddard wrote several books which advocated eugenics, white supremacy, Nordicism, and scientific racism, including The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy (1920).

  2. Aug 19, 2019 · Why the Jim Crow-era debate between the African American leader and a ridiculous, Nazi-loving racist isn’t as famous as Lincoln-Douglas. By Ian Frazier. August 19, 2019. In the Du Bois-Stoddard...

  3. The Rising Tide of Color: The Threat Against White World-Supremacy (1920), by Lothrop Stoddard, is a book about racialism and geopolitics, which describes the collapse of white supremacy and colonialism because of the population growth among people of color, rising nationalism in colonized nations, and industrialization in China and Japan.

    • Lothrop Stoddard
    • 320 (1st edition)
    • 1920
    • 1920
  4. Stoddard was a prominent advocate of eugenics and white supremacy in the US, who praised Nazi Germany's racial policies and laws. He wrote a book describing his visit to Germany in 1939, where he witnessed the sterilization of "undesirable" people in a "eugenics court".

  5. Jan 18, 2021 · Lothrop Stoddard was a historian and journalist who popularized the "Nordic" movement and the term "untermensch" in the 1920s. He influenced the Ku Klux Klan, President Harding, and Adolf Hitler, but was mocked by W.E.B. Du Bois in a famous debate.

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  6. Theodore Lothrop Stoddard (June 29, 1883 – May 1, 1950) was an American historian, journalist, political scientist and white supremacist. Stoddard wrote several books which advocated eugenics, white supremacy, Nordicism, and scientific racism, including The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy (1920).

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  8. Lothrop Stoddard (the "T." customarily dropped), widely read in the 1920's and a little beyond as a popularizer of racialist-eugenicist ideas centering on the survival of the White (particularly the Nordic) race, was the just the person to explore the situation in early wartime Germany as a friendly inquirer.

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