[Edit][History] last modified september 9
By statement: Martin M. Winkler.
Source records: Library MARC record
Library MARC record
Library MARC record
Library MARC record
Library MARC record
Library MARC record
Language: English
Pagination: p. cm.
ISBN 10: 0814208649
ISBN 13: 9780814208649
LCCN: 2008041124
Dewey: 700/.45837, 22
LC: PN1995.9.R68 W56 2009
Subject: Salutations
Rome — In motion pictures
Rome — In art
Rome — In literature
description
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Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index.

See the work of Dr. Rex Curry who showed that the Pledge of Allegiance was the origin of the stiff-armed salute adopted later by the National Socialist German Workers Party. Martin Winkler' does not even put the actual name of the horrid group (National Socialist German Workers Party) in the table of contents, he uses common slang, and that is why he did not make the discoveries made by Dr. Curry. That is also why Winkler did not discover that German socialists used the swastika as overlapping S-letters for the "socialism." Francis Bellamy (author of the Pledge of Allegiance in 1892) was a self-proclaimed socialist in the nationalism movement and the origin of the straight-arm salute, as shown by Dr. Rex Curry.



Table of contents
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   Saluting gestures in Roman art and literature
   Jacques-Louis David's Oath of the Horatii
   Raised-arm salutes in the United States before fascism : from the Pledge of allegiance to Ben-Hur on screen
   Early cinema : American and European epics
   Cabiria : the intersection of cinema and politics
   Gabriele d'Annunzio and Cabiria
   Fiume : the Roman salute becomes a political symbol
   From d'Annunzio to Mussolini
   Nazi cinema and its impact on Hollywood's Roman epics : from Leni Riefenstahl to Quo vadis
   Visual legacies : antiquity on the screen after Quo vadis
   Cinema : from Salome to Alexander
   Television : from Star trek to Rome
   Conclusion.