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* In ''Literature/AnimalFarm'', Mr Frederick of Pinchfield Farm is Nazi Germany in the analogy. Frederick is known to torture his animals, uses anti-Animalist propaganda to keep them in line, and after making a deal with Napoleon which he immediately cheats him in, he attempts to seize Animal Farm in the Battle of the Windmill.



* The Pure ones in ''Literature/GuardiansOfGaHoole'' are owls who believe that ''Tyto alba'' -- barn owls -- are superior to any other species of owl.

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* The Pure ones Ones in ''Literature/GuardiansOfGaHoole'' are owls who believe that ''Tyto alba'' -- barn owls -- are superior to any other species of owl.



* In ''Literature/AnimalFarm'', Mr Frederick of Pinchfield Farm is Nazi Germany in the analogy. Frederick is known to torture his animals, uses anti-Animalist propaganda to keep them in line, and after making a deal with Napoleon which he immediately cheats him in, he attempts to seize Animal Farm in the Battle of the Windmill.
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Trope was cut/disambiguated due to cleanup


* The TV movie and the book ''Film/TheWave1981'' is about a teacher who starts a youth movement at a high school that is suspiciously close to Nazism, in order to teach AnAesop about how easy it is to get caught up in such a situation. It is based on a true story.

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* The TV movie and the book ''Film/TheWave1981'' is about a teacher who starts a youth movement at a high school that is suspiciously close to Nazism, in order to teach AnAesop a lesson about how easy it is to get caught up in such a situation. It is based on a true story.
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* The Franchise/BerniceSummerfield novel ''Down'' by LawrenceMiles features a member of the Stella Stora Sigma Schutz-Staffel [=SturmSoldaten=] (the SSSSSS), "the most ineffective Nazi group since the Outer Hebridean National Party", who is a collection of [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazi stereotypes]] masquerading as a character (intentionally; his CharacterArc is that he realises this). The less ludicrous Fifth Axis appeared later in the same series (now continued as novels and audio plays published by Creator/BigFinish). In a case of it all coming full circle, it turned out that the Fifth Axis [[TheManBehindTheMan worked for the Daleks]].

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* The Franchise/BerniceSummerfield Literature/BerniceSummerfield novel ''Down'' by LawrenceMiles features a member of the Stella Stora Sigma Schutz-Staffel [=SturmSoldaten=] (the SSSSSS), "the most ineffective Nazi group since the Outer Hebridean National Party", who is a collection of [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazi stereotypes]] masquerading as a character (intentionally; his CharacterArc is that he realises this). The less ludicrous Fifth Axis appeared later in the same series (now continued as novels and audio plays published by Creator/BigFinish). In a case of it all coming full circle, it turned out that the Fifth Axis [[TheManBehindTheMan worked for the Daleks]].

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* In ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'', the Party INGSOC is ''very'' Nazi-like. It kills and/or kidnaps any dissidents, tirelessly releases propaganda, is discriminant towards the populace and is constantly at war. [[spoiler:O'Brien]] even notes in his GrandInquisitorScene that the Nazis and the Stalinists came closest to what the Party is trying to achieve. It may verge into CommieNazis, as they're also based on Stalinists (who Orwell hated) and then-current Soviet repression (the point being all totalitarianism has some similarities), with a supposedly socialist ideology (however O'Brien privately admits their [[DespotismJustifiesTheMeans real goal is simply power]]).



* In ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'', the Party INGSOC is ''very'' Nazi-like. It kills and/or kidnaps any dissidents, tirelessly releases propaganda, is discriminant towards the populace and is constantly at war. [[spoiler:O'Brien]] even notes in his GrandInquisitorScene that the Nazis and the Stalinists came closest to what the Party is trying to achieve. It may verge into CommieNazis, as they're also based on Stalinists (who Orwell hated) and then-current Soviet repression (the point being all totalitarianism has some similarities), with a supposedly socialist ideology (however, O'Brien privately admits that [[DespotismJustifiesTheMeans their real goal is simply power]]).



* In Creator/OctaviaButler's ''Literature/ParableOfTheTalents'', the Christian America sect is exactly like the Nazis. They have a GloriousLeader, Jarrett, who persecutes all non-Christians and others who he sees a scapegoats. They place all people they see as "heathens" into concentration camps where they are forced to do hard labor, be converted to Christianity, and raped and beaten. They also often will take the children of the so-called "heathens" in order to raise them as Christians.

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* In Creator/OctaviaButler's ''Literature/ParableOfTheTalents'', ''[[Literature/ParableOfTheSower Parable of the Talents]]'', the Christian America sect is exactly like the Nazis. They have a GloriousLeader, Jarrett, who persecutes all non-Christians and others who he sees a scapegoats. They place all people they see as "heathens" into concentration camps where they are forced to do hard labor, be converted to Christianity, and raped and beaten. They also often will take the children of the so-called "heathens" in order to raise them as Christians.
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lk fix


* ''Literature/RecordOfLodossWarCrownOfTheCovenant'': Diaz, the new king of Flaim, evokes pretty standard fascist rhetoric when he takes the throne: he calls back to the imperial ambitions of the founder of Flaim and argues that the long peace and the eponymous magical crowns that enforce it have been stifling them from achieving their manifest destiny to rule Lodoss.

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* ''Literature/RecordOfLodossWarCrownOfTheCovenant'': ''Literature/RecordOfLodossWarTheCrownOfTheCovenant'': Diaz, the new king of Flaim, evokes pretty standard fascist rhetoric when he takes the throne: he calls back to the imperial ambitions of the founder of Flaim and argues that the long peace and the eponymous magical crowns that enforce it have been stifling them from achieving their manifest destiny to rule Lodoss.
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* ''Literature/RecordOfLodossWarCrownOfTheCovenant'': Diaz, the new king of Flaim, evokes pretty standard fascist rhetoric when he takes the throne: he calls back to the imperial ambitions of the founder of Flaim and argues that the long peace and the eponymous magical crowns that enforce it have been stifling them from achieving their manifest destiny to rule Lodoss.

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* ''Literature/TheEschatonSeries'': In ''Iron Sunrise'', there's a supposed "master race" called the [=ReMastered=]. Creator/CharlesStross has said in his blog that his original working title for the book was ''Space Nazis Must Die!''



* In Creator/CharlesStross's ''Literature/IronSunrise'', there's a supposed "master race" called the [=ReMastered=]. Stross has said in his blog that his original working title for the book was ''Space Nazis Must Die!''
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* T. H. White's ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has a Hitler analogue in the person of Mordred, who leads the Nazi-like Thrashers. Mordred pushes ideas of racial supremacy and anti-semitic ideas. An ant colony, which Myth/{{Merl|in}}yn takes Myth/KingArthur to visit into using magic, stands in more for fascism generally. The ant society's suppression of individuality is a strong allegory for the totalitarian state. In the postlude ''Literature/TheBookOfMerlyn'', White, through his AuthorAvatar of Merlyn, stands up in favor of {{anarchy|IsChaos}} and what he calls the collectivist philosophies of fascism, communism and capitalism.

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* T. H. White's ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has a Hitler analogue in the person of Mordred, who leads the Nazi-like Thrashers. Mordred pushes ideas of racial supremacy and anti-semitic ideas. An ant colony, which Myth/{{Merl|in}}yn takes Myth/KingArthur to visit into using magic, stands in more for fascism generally. The ant society's suppression of individuality is a strong allegory for the totalitarian state. In the postlude ''Literature/TheBookOfMerlyn'', White, through his AuthorAvatar of Merlyn, stands up in favor of {{anarchy|IsChaos}} and against what he calls the collectivist philosophies of fascism, communism and capitalism.
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** And that's not even getting into the ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows seventh]]'' [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows book]], for most of which the PowerTrio are on the run in one of the most blatant parallels of Nazi-occupied Europe ever seen. The Ministry of Magic has become so corrupted from the inside by LesCollaborateurs, that they essentially pass the Nuremberg Laws against Muggle-born wizards, and under the guidance of Umbridge are shown creating pamphlets touting purity of blood whose content and saccharine covers call to mind the publications of Julius Streicher. In those pamphlets, the Ministry openly bans Muggle-borns (wizards born to a non-magical parent) from going to Hogwarts, makes it a crime *not* to report on them, and explicitly describes their plan to send them [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust to camps]]. The various Death Eater minions inside the Ministry are dressed in khaki clothes, with red, white, and black armbands bearing the Dark Mark. The sign of [[spoiler: the Deathly Hallows]] has a history very similar to that of the swastika, as well - originally an innocent symbol, then used by wizard-supremacist Grindelwald, etched on walls by stupid pricks to get attention...

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** And that's not even getting into the ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows seventh]]'' [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows book]], for most of which the PowerTrio are on the run in one of the most blatant parallels of Nazi-occupied Europe ever seen.seen outside of the {{Dystopia}} genre. The Ministry of Magic has become so corrupted from the inside by LesCollaborateurs, that they essentially pass the Nuremberg Laws against Muggle-born wizards, and under the guidance of Umbridge are shown creating pamphlets touting purity of blood whose content and saccharine covers call to mind the publications of Julius Streicher. In those pamphlets, the Ministry openly bans Muggle-borns (wizards born to a non-magical parent) from going to Hogwarts, makes it a crime *not* to report on them, and explicitly describes their plan to send them [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust to camps]]. The various Death Eater minions inside the Ministry are dressed in khaki clothes, with red, white, and black armbands bearing the Dark Mark. The sign of [[spoiler: the Deathly Hallows]] has a history very similar to that of the swastika, as well - originally an innocent symbol, then used by wizard-supremacist Grindelwald, etched on walls by stupid pricks to get attention...
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* The villains of ''{{Redwall}}'' installment ''Triss'' are the royal family of Pure Ferrets, who are pure white and deem themselves the only ones worthy to rule Riftgard while enslaving other species, and [[FunetikAksent shpeak mitt shtronk German accents]].

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* The villains of ''{{Redwall}}'' ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'' installment ''Triss'' are the royal family of Pure Ferrets, who are pure white and deem themselves the only ones worthy to rule Riftgard while enslaving other species, and [[FunetikAksent shpeak mitt shtronk German accents]].
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* ''Literature/SpaceAcademyDropouts'': The Notha are a race of fascists and an authoritarian totalitarian military dictatorship. They don’t consider other species sentient but talking animals. The Community races hold them in contempt in return with Vance struggling to treat them with the respect he doesn’t get from them.

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* ''Literature/SpaceAcademyDropouts'': ''Literature/SpaceAcademy'': The Notha are a race of fascists and an authoritarian totalitarian military dictatorship. They don’t consider other species sentient but talking animals. The Community races hold them in contempt in return with Vance struggling to treat them with the respect he doesn’t get from them.
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* ''Literature/SpaceAcademyDropouts'': The Notha are a race of fascists and an authoritarian totalitarian military dictatorship. They don’t consider other species sentient but talking animals. The Community races hold them in contempt in return with Vance struggling to treat them with the respect he doesn’t get from them.
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removed an Up To Eleven wick


* The Republic of Gilead in ''Literature/TheHandmaidsTale'' is a [[TheTheocracy theocratic]], [[NoWomansLand hyper-misogynistic]] version (even more so than [[UpToEleven the actual Nazis]]) of this trope, but it still counts: they are white supremacists that ship off non-whites of both genders to the Colonies (which are basically death camps) and regard African-Americans as "Children of Ham", a narrative used historically in real life to explain black skin and justify slavery. Its also implied they have quietly exterminated Jews by pretending to send them to Israel, only to drop them off in the middle of the ocean. The [[Series/TheHandmaidsTale tv show]] downplays the racism aspect by allowing non-whites to live in their territory, employing them as part of the army and the Handmaid program and encouraging their birth-rates. Of course this also means enslaving non-white women and turning them into {{Breeding Slave}}s, so it isn't much better.

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* The Republic of Gilead in ''Literature/TheHandmaidsTale'' is a [[TheTheocracy theocratic]], [[NoWomansLand hyper-misogynistic]] version (even more so than [[UpToEleven the actual Nazis]]) Nazis) of this trope, but it still counts: they are white supremacists that ship off non-whites of both genders to the Colonies (which are basically death camps) and regard African-Americans as "Children of Ham", a narrative used historically in real life to explain black skin and justify slavery. Its also implied they have quietly exterminated Jews by pretending to send them to Israel, only to drop them off in the middle of the ocean. The [[Series/TheHandmaidsTale tv show]] downplays the racism aspect by allowing non-whites to live in their territory, employing them as part of the army and the Handmaid program and encouraging their birth-rates. Of course this also means enslaving non-white women and turning them into {{Breeding Slave}}s, so it isn't much better.
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Dewicking Disambig


* In what is probably the most well-known example, the Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].

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* In what is probably the most well-known example, the Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies [[SuperpowerfulGenetics pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].
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* The TV movie and the book ''Film/TheWave'' is about a teacher who starts a youth movement at a high school that is suspiciously close to Nazism, in order to teach AnAesop about how easy it is to get caught up in such a situation. It is based on a true story.

to:

* The TV movie and the book ''Film/TheWave'' ''Film/TheWave1981'' is about a teacher who starts a youth movement at a high school that is suspiciously close to Nazism, in order to teach AnAesop about how easy it is to get caught up in such a situation. It is based on a true story.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Any colorised photo of Hitler shows he clearly had blue eyes


* In what is probably the most well-known example, the Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired with brown eyes, and there are rumors about him having Jewish ancestry. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].

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* In what is probably the most well-known example, the Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired with brown eyes, and there are rumors about him having Jewish ancestry.haired. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].
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* ''Literature/BrotherInTheLand'', examines the aftermath of a global nuclear war. Among [[CrapsackWorld many other horrors]], an elite of survivors shoot hoarders; execute the sick, and, on penalty of starvation, enforce agricultural toil.

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* ''Literature/BrotherInTheLand'', ''Literature/BrotherInTheLand'' examines the aftermath of a global nuclear war. Among [[CrapsackWorld many other horrors]], an elite of survivors shoot hoarders; execute the sick, and, on penalty of starvation, enforce agricultural toil.
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*''Literature/BrotherInTheLand'', examines the aftermath of a global nuclear war. Among [[CrapsackWorld many other horrors]], an elite of survivors shoot hoarders; execute the sick, and, on penalty of starvation, enforce agricultural toil.
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* In ''Literature/TheDreamsideRoad'', [[TheRemnant The Liberty Corps]] has shades of this. They have yet to commit any large-scale atrocities, in-story, but many of their agents have no qualms about killing civilians as they pursue [[SignatureTeamTransport the Aesir]] and its crew.
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* The Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired with brown eyes, and there are rumors about him having Jewish ancestry. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].

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* The In what is probably the most well-known example, the Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired with brown eyes, and there are rumors about him having Jewish ancestry. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].
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* ''Literature/ThatHideousStrength'': The National Institute of Coordinated Experiments definitely qualifies, with Lord Feverstone talking about "[[WouldBeRudeToSayGenocide liquidation of the backwards races]]" being part of their overall plans, taking control of the newspapers, and having a rather reich-ish and brutal institutional police. Their head director, Horace Jewels, is good at giving speeches, but rather incompetent overall--[[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything sound]] [[UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler familiar]]?. They even have some literally [[LegionsOfHell diabolical]] MadScience going on, giving them the rare feat of having shades of StupidJetpackHitler and {{Ghostapo}} at the same time!


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* Creator/FrankHerbert has stated that he based House Harkonnen from the ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' novels on the Nazis. It's a little bit subtle, though, because they show very few of the ReligionOfEvil tendencies of the Nazis, and more of the [[DeadlyDecadentCourt intrigue, personality conflicts, and decadence.]]

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* Creator/FrankHerbert has stated that he based House Harkonnen from the ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' novels on the Nazis. It's a little bit subtle, though, because they show very few of the ReligionOfEvil tendencies of the Nazis, and more of the [[DeadlyDecadentCourt [[DecadentCourt intrigue, personality conflicts, and decadence.]]
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* T. H. White's ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has a Hitler analogue in the person of Mordred, who leads the Nazi-like Thrashers. An ant colony, which Myth/{{Merl|in}}yn takes Myth/KingArthur to visit into using magic, stands in more for fascism generally. The ant society's suppression of individuality is a strong allegory for the totalitarian state. In the postlude ''Literature/TheBookOfMerlyn'', White, through his AuthorAvatar of Merlyn, stands up in favor of {{anarchy|IsChaos}} and what he calls the collectivist philosophies of fascism, communism and capitalism.

to:

* T. H. White's ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has a Hitler analogue in the person of Mordred, who leads the Nazi-like Thrashers. Mordred pushes ideas of racial supremacy and anti-semitic ideas. An ant colony, which Myth/{{Merl|in}}yn takes Myth/KingArthur to visit into using magic, stands in more for fascism generally. The ant society's suppression of individuality is a strong allegory for the totalitarian state. In the postlude ''Literature/TheBookOfMerlyn'', White, through his AuthorAvatar of Merlyn, stands up in favor of {{anarchy|IsChaos}} and what he calls the collectivist philosophies of fascism, communism and capitalism.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

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* In ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'', the Party INGSOC is ''very'' Nazi-like. It kills and/or kidnaps any dissidents, tirelessly releases propaganda, is discriminant towards the populace and is constantly at war. [[spoiler:O'Brien]] even notes in his GrandInquisitorScene that the Nazis and the Stalinists came closest to what the Party is trying to achieve. It may verge into CommieNazis, as they're also based on Stalinists (who Orwell hated) and then-current Soviet repression (the point being all totalitarianism has some similarities), with a supposedly socialist ideology (however O'Brien privately admits their [[DespotismJustifiesTheMeans real goal is simply power]]).
* In ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' one of the protagonists compares [[EldritchAbomination Crayak]] to a Nazi, given his genocidal plans to wipe out every species but the Howlers. [[SufficientlyAdvancedAlien The Ellimist]] agrees that term is probably accurate "in a moral sense."
* In the world of Selenoth (''Literature/TheArtsOfDarkAndLight''), [[TheEmpire Savondir]] is a totalitarian monarchy with expansionism, Darwinism and eugenics, FantasticRacism, purges, a powerful corps of mages who function as a StateSec, and a cowed local church that [[IntellectuallySupportedTyranny shills]] for its totalitarian government.
* The Malwa in the ''Literature/BelisariusSeries'' were there to restore the purity of the human race. Except they were remarkably incompetent about it.
* The primary villains of ''Literature/CarsonOfVenus'' by Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs are the militaristic, dictatorial "[[SignificantAnagram Zani]] Party", complete with an incompetent ally from a nearby city named [[UsefulNotes/BenitoMussolini Muso]].
* ''Literature/{{Caliphate}}'' is an interesting example of [[EvilVersusEvil two opposing parties]] featuring a few subtle Nazi aspects:
** The [[OppressiveStatesOfAmerica Imperial States of America]] is an anti-Islamic fascist empire that initially rounded up Muslims in internment camps just before deciding to nuke most Islamic countries in the world and annexing most of the American continent in which the narration uses terms like ''Anschluss''. Much like the Third Reich, its ruled by an President that functions like a Fuhrer due to having repealed the constitution, civil rights and freedom of expression among other things.
** The titular Caliphate doesn't seem like this trope at first, having more in common with the Taliban combined with the historical Ottoman Empire. However, Muslims are considered superior to everyone else as all second-class citizens, especially Christians, are referred to as the slur ''Nazrani'' (Nazarene). Its also a totalitarian state characterized by trusting in the authoritative power of one book, being queasy about sexual deviance, contemptuous of women, hostile to modernity, nostalgic for past glories, obsessed with old grievances and addicted to revenge. It's possibly no coincidence that their ''mutaween'' [[ChurchPolice religious police]] functions like the Gestapo and most of what we see takes place in Germany. [[spoiler:Then its revealed they plan to use a biological weapon to exterminate non-Muslims all around the world]].
** One has to wonder where the Jewish people would fit into this scenario. Well, a throwaway comment by a character makes an [[FridgeHorror disturbing implication]] about how Israel solved the Palestinian problem once and for all.
-->'''Caruthers''': "...they learned the lessons [[BecameTheirOwnAntithesis Himmler and Eichmann]] sought to teach [them], as well".
* The Franchise/BerniceSummerfield novel ''Down'' by LawrenceMiles features a member of the Stella Stora Sigma Schutz-Staffel [=SturmSoldaten=] (the SSSSSS), "the most ineffective Nazi group since the Outer Hebridean National Party", who is a collection of [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazi stereotypes]] masquerading as a character (intentionally; his CharacterArc is that he realises this). The less ludicrous Fifth Axis appeared later in the same series (now continued as novels and audio plays published by Creator/BigFinish). In a case of it all coming full circle, it turned out that the Fifth Axis [[TheManBehindTheMan worked for the Daleks]].
* German children's book ''Der überaus starke Willibald''. Said Willibald is a mouse who takes over the colony of mice living in the house when things look bad. Then he ostracizes an albino mouse and everyone who opposes his reign. His allies are the fat Hermann-mouse and the smart Josef-mouse who likes to spew slogans like "Flink wie Fledermäuse, hart wie Tirolerbrot, zäh wie Schweineschwarte" (agile like bats, hard as Tyrolean bread, tough as pork rinds - a variation of the Hitler Youth slogan "agile like sighthounds, hard as Krupp steel, tough as leather").
** Justified as the book is pretty obviously meant to educate German children about the Third Reich.
* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' has several Nazi-like groups:
** Wolfgang von Uberwald's [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolf]] "movement" in ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'' deserves mention here. Wolf wears a black uniform with a nickel crest of a wolf's head and lightning bolts, uses phrases like "Joy through Strength" and his mother calls [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame dwarfs]] "subhuman" (Ironically, because they use a different set of idioms than humans do, a dwarf [[InsultBackfire might take that as a compliment]]).[[note]]According to a 1943 OSS profile, "Wulf" was UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler's favorite nickname for himself. "Adolf" comes from "Noble Wolf" in Old High German.[[/note]]
** The vampires in ''Literature/CarpeJugulum'' are also organized racists ("The trolls are stupid, the dwarfs are devious, the pixies are evil and the gnomes stick in your teeth"), but less military about it.
** The Dogs' Guild in ''Literature/MenAtArms''. Their entry in ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}} Discworld'' notes that if Big Fido had been human "the Discworld might have been in serious trouble, possibly involving jackboots", and certainly the image of an insane poodle insisting "the proper shape for a dog was a lot bigger" calls to mind a short, dark-haired man going on about Nordic perfection. According to ''The Discworld Companion'', his speeches even included the phrase "the Master race" ... only this was humanity, which caninekind was going to overthrow.
** While ideology is lacking, the past Ankh-Morpork shown in ''Literature/{{Night Watch|Discworld}}'' is a fascist police state along similar lines as that in ''Comicbook/VForVendetta''. Notably, the SecretPolice are called the Cable Street Particulars, which besides being a ShoutOut to the heroic [[Literature/SherlockHolmes Baker Street Irregulars]] references the "Battle of Cable Street" between Oswald Mosley's Blackshirts and anti-fascist Londoners. Their leader, Captain Swing, fits the "non-Aryan/perverse Nazi" role, being odd and sickly looking (think Goebbels) yet obsessed with a Eugenic kind of phrenology. (Although phrenology was popular with the sillier sort of criminologists back when Hitler was still painting postcards in Vienna, so it may not be an intended Nazi reference.)
* Creator/SMStirling has stated that his goal in creating Literature/TheDraka was to imagine a Nazi-like country that actually [[TheBadGuyWins knew what it was doing]]. The Draka are like the Nazis but DarkerAndEdgier. In fact, the first novel of the ''Draka'' tetralogy is set in the opening hours of [[EvilVersusEvil a war between the Draka and Nazi Germany]], which eventually leads to the [[CurbstompBattle fall of Europe]].
* Creator/FrankHerbert has stated that he based House Harkonnen from the ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' novels on the Nazis. It's a little bit subtle, though, because they show very few of the ReligionOfEvil tendencies of the Nazis, and more of the [[DeadlyDecadentCourt intrigue, personality conflicts, and decadence.]]
** On the other hand the ''good guys'' worshiped a messianic warlord, held traditional civilization in contempt, were arrogant about their physical prowess, had an arcane occultist religion which included the use of narcotics, and launched a holy war for the liberation of their race. There's a bit of BlackAndGrayMorality going on, which is probably deliberate.
* The Hittites in ''Literature/TheEgyptian'' are treated as Nazi-expies. Which is not really fair. The whole book can be interpreted as an allegory of WWII, but especially the people's reactions to it. The factions aren't supposed to be expies. At most, they are references to World War II.
* The human-supremacist groups that crop up in the ''Literature/GarrettPI'' novels after the Cantard War's end have this flavor. Ironically, they're referred to in-Verse as "human rights" groups, with the implication that ''only'' humans should have legal rights in Karenta.
* The Human Crew in ''Literature/{{Gone}}'' is a group dedicated to murdering all the kids with superpowers, who they call a variety of racial slurs including "freaks", "moofs", "mutant freaks", and "chuds" and don't consider to be human, and putting "normals" in control.
* The Pure ones in ''Literature/GuardiansOfGaHoole'' are owls who believe that ''Tyto alba'' -- barn owls -- are superior to any other species of owl.
* The Republic of Gilead in ''Literature/TheHandmaidsTale'' is a [[TheTheocracy theocratic]], [[NoWomansLand hyper-misogynistic]] version (even more so than [[UpToEleven the actual Nazis]]) of this trope, but it still counts: they are white supremacists that ship off non-whites of both genders to the Colonies (which are basically death camps) and regard African-Americans as "Children of Ham", a narrative used historically in real life to explain black skin and justify slavery. Its also implied they have quietly exterminated Jews by pretending to send them to Israel, only to drop them off in the middle of the ocean. The [[Series/TheHandmaidsTale tv show]] downplays the racism aspect by allowing non-whites to live in their territory, employing them as part of the army and the Handmaid program and encouraging their birth-rates. Of course this also means enslaving non-white women and turning them into {{Breeding Slave}}s, so it isn't much better.
* The Death Eaters from ''Literature/HarryPotter'' believe in the superiority of [[WitchSpecies pure blood]], and will kill anyone they feel is inferior to them. Their leader, Voldemort, hates anyone not of pure wizard blood, yet he himself is not pure blood; UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler viewed "Aryans," commonly portrayed as blonds with blue eyes as the master race, yet he himself was brown haired with brown eyes, and there are rumors about him having Jewish ancestry. Creator/JKRowling [[WordOfGod acknowledged]] the Death Eaters are supposed to represent the Nazis, though the American-produced [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire film adaptation]] of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' played with the parallel a bit by having the Death Eaters don costumes resembling [[UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan black Klansmen's robes]].
** And that's not even getting into the ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows seventh]]'' [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows book]], for most of which the PowerTrio are on the run in one of the most blatant parallels of Nazi-occupied Europe ever seen. The Ministry of Magic has become so corrupted from the inside by LesCollaborateurs, that they essentially pass the Nuremberg Laws against Muggle-born wizards, and under the guidance of Umbridge are shown creating pamphlets touting purity of blood whose content and saccharine covers call to mind the publications of Julius Streicher. In those pamphlets, the Ministry openly bans Muggle-borns (wizards born to a non-magical parent) from going to Hogwarts, makes it a crime *not* to report on them, and explicitly describes their plan to send them [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust to camps]]. The various Death Eater minions inside the Ministry are dressed in khaki clothes, with red, white, and black armbands bearing the Dark Mark. The sign of [[spoiler: the Deathly Hallows]] has a history very similar to that of the swastika, as well - originally an innocent symbol, then used by wizard-supremacist Grindelwald, etched on walls by stupid pricks to get attention...
** Naturally, Grindelwald was defeated in 1945, of all years, and holed up in a prison called Nurmengard (which sounds like Nuremberg, and has the very "Arbeit macht frei"-like slogan, "For the Greater Good", carved over the gate). Fans have used this to speculate on [[{{Ghostapo}} whether Grindelwald actually had something to do with the rise of the Nazis themselves]]. Also, a lunatic, old loner as the last inmate of an incredibly well-guarded prison? That sounds like [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Hess Rudolf Hess.]]
*** Regardless, the possibility of a task force of wizards and muggles contributing to the Allied victory over the Nazis is invoked in-universe.
** The Polish translation of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows Deathly Hallows]]'' explicitly called the Snatchers (those who hunted Muggleborns and LaResistance for profit) ''szmalcownicy''. RealLife ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Szmalcownicy szmalcownicy]]'' sold hiding Jews to the Nazis during [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarII the War]].
*** Said Snatchers can also be compared to the ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einsatzgruppen Einsatzgruppen]]'' that hunted Jews, ''inter alia'', in occupied Europe.
** Another very obvious nod by Rowling to the Nazi association with Voldemort and Death Eaters comes from a book Hermione reads about Voldemort and the Dark Arts called ''The Rise and Fall of the Dark Arts'' in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndThePhilosophersStone''. This is a nod to journalist William Shirer's seminal history of Nazi Germany, ''The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich''.
** Umbridge [[BitchInSheepsClothing hides it a bit better]] than the Death Eaters in her [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheOrderOfThePhoenix first appearance]], but she's honestly no better than them. By the final book, she drops the mask and starts holding a KangarooCourt to persecute Muggleborn Wizards.
* The Creator/GarthNix short story "Hope Chest" features a villain called the Leader who terrifies populations into submission and brings everyone who hears his voice under his thrall.
* In the ''Literature/HostileTakeoverSwann'' series, the planet of Waldgrave, where the Dacham brothers grew up, is a planet inhabited by blond blue-eyed people, ruled by an openly fascist government, and devoted to ethnic purity.
* In Creator/CharlesStross's ''Literature/IronSunrise'', there's a supposed "master race" called the [=ReMastered=]. Stross has said in his blog that his original working title for the book was ''Space Nazis Must Die!''
* In ''Literature/ItCantHappenHere'', the Windrip regime is led by a charismatic dictator and characterized by racism, jingoism, vicious suppression of dissent, concentration camps, and foolish wars of conquest. To boot, the Corpo Youth is reminiscent of the Hitler Youth. Especially jarring is the fact that the novel was published in 1935, shortly after the Nazis came into power. Creator/SinclairLewis' satire proved prescient about the horrors of Nazism, but was unappreciated in its own time for a plot that contemporary critics found improbable, which is to say, they didn't think ''Literature/ItCantHappenHere'' could happen there.
* In Wodehouse's ''Literature/JeevesAndWooster'', Sir Roderick Spode is leader of the Black Shorts, obviously based on Oswald Moseley's {{Black Shirt}}s. His followers shout 'Heil Spode!' In [[Series/JeevesAndWooster the TV series]], the Black Shorts use the 'flash in the pan' symbol associated with the Black Shirts, and instead of craniometrics or eugenics, they practice a bizarre pseudoscience based on measuring knees.
* In ''Literature/TheMigaxCycle'', much of Migaxian rhetoric is reminiscent of the Nazis, especially their emphasis on ridding Migax of squells. This is magnified once skeefers are herded into ghettos and are forced to register with the government.
* In ''Literature/MosesManOfTheMountain'' the ancient Egyptians are portrayed this way: the nationalist rhetoric of the Pharaoh's speeches, the militaristic foreign policy, the vaguely German-sounding titles, and the all-seeing secret police evoke images of a certain world power [[TheThirties of the time]].
* T. H. White's ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has a Hitler analogue in the person of Mordred, who leads the Nazi-like Thrashers. An ant colony, which Myth/{{Merl|in}}yn takes Myth/KingArthur to visit into using magic, stands in more for fascism generally. The ant society's suppression of individuality is a strong allegory for the totalitarian state. In the postlude ''Literature/TheBookOfMerlyn'', White, through his AuthorAvatar of Merlyn, stands up in favor of {{anarchy|IsChaos}} and what he calls the collectivist philosophies of fascism, communism and capitalism.
* In Creator/OctaviaButler's ''Literature/ParableOfTheTalents'', the Christian America sect is exactly like the Nazis. They have a GloriousLeader, Jarrett, who persecutes all non-Christians and others who he sees a scapegoats. They place all people they see as "heathens" into concentration camps where they are forced to do hard labor, be converted to Christianity, and raped and beaten. They also often will take the children of the so-called "heathens" in order to raise them as Christians.
* The Swedish children's book series ''Literature/PeterNoTail'' (or ''[[DubNameChange Pelle]] No-Tail'') has a FantasticRacism example in [[CatsAreMean Måns]], who bullies the title character for having no tail and for being a housecat. He frequently tries to rally the other cats against Pelle by singling him out as supposedly priveleged. The books themselves were first written in the 1930s by Gösta Knutsson, who was appalled by the acceptance of Nazism by many Swedes at the time.
* ''Literature/ThePlotAgainstAmerica'': Subverted. While it seems for much of the book that Lindbergh is a Nazi, a member of the protagonist's family who worked in the Lindbergh administration claims that Lindbergh was forced to govern by the Nazis, who had kidnapped his son (who is thought to have been killed). Note however this is never proved. In any case, while antisemitic policies ''are'' begun by Lindbergh, they're much milder than what the Nazis did, which indicates the theory may be correct.
* ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'' Ungatt Trunn's Blue Hordes. They insist that they're "The Chosen Ones" and that every creature that isn't one of them is a member of "the lower orders". Also, the land of Riftgard can only be ruled by a member of the family of "Pure Ferrets", who all speak with ridiculous faux-German {{Funetik Aksent}}s.
* The character of BOSS agent Liutnant Verkramp, in Creator/TomSharpe's novels of apartheid South Africa, ''Literature/RiotousAssembly'' and ''Literature/IndecentExposure''. Verkramp, the sworn defender of apartheid and the white Boer race, enlists a German psychiatrist and possible Nazi refugee, Doktor von Blimenstein, in making precise scientific measurements of black Africans so that he can assess how tainted the Piemburg Police Force is by black blood. Incidentally, sharpe is playing this as satire and very black comedy.
* Church of the God Awaiting of ''Literature/{{Safehold}}'' mixes this with ReligionOfEvil. They have a leader who's getting more and more insane as the war goes on (Clyntahn), his Minister of Propaganda ''a la'' Church (Rayno) the "enemy" who "must be eradicated" (Charisians and Reformists), feared organisation that supervises said eradication and searches for heresy (Inquisition) and concentration camps which are referred to as such. Lampshaded in ''Midst Toil And Tribulation'', where Merlin compares them to Nazis in the narrative.
* In Creator/FrederikPohl's ''Search the Sky'', the Biological Faction of the [[ReligionOfEvil Jones conformity cult]] ([[HarsherInHindsight No, not that Jones cult; this was written in]] TheFifties) was convinced that everyone who did not fit the draconian Jones phenotype was AlwaysChaoticEvil. Since they took over the colony world Jones long before the story takes place, we know very little about the Cultural Faction, save that they were probably the lesser of two evils once the Joneses had won.
* In ''Literature/ShadowOfTheConqueror,'' this trope is [[PlayingWithATrope Played With]]. The book actually features a group of people called Dawnists (named for [[TheEmpire the Dawn Empire]], which they want to bring back) who are analogues to ''Neo''-Nazis, their monstrous idol being [[EvilOverLord Dayless the Conqueror]] himself. The main difference between these guys and real life Neo-Nazis is that there's actually no evidence of racism in either the Dawnists, Dayless, or Dayless's policies. The desire to TakeOverTheWorld and give a HistoricalHeroUpgrade to a despot and war criminal they're all too young to have actually experienced firsthand are still there, though.
* Sherman Alexie's short story "The Sin Eaters" provides an inversion of this trope: Rounding up minorities in concentration camps? Check. But why? To get bone marrow from them to fight a plague and, rather than wiping them out, ''[[MateOrDie forcibly breeding]]'' them. The woman the narrator is forced to mate with points out that [[PaedoHunt he's just twelve]]. AndThatsTerrible.
* The Army of Excellence in ''Literature/SwanSong'', who want to destroy everyone who developed disfiguring keloids after [[WorldWarIII nuclear war]] destroyed America. There's a lot of talk about 'genetic purity', and the leader even wears some vintage SS uniforms.
* Creator/HarryTurtledove:
** The Freedom Party from the ''Literature/{{Timeline 191}}'' series are the AlternateUniverse CSA-version of the Nazis, with Jake Featherston standing in for Hitler, and mass murder of blacks replacing the Holocaust.
** Inverted in the novel length version of ''In the Presence of Mine Enemies'', where the "Nazi" leaders are Gorbachev and Yeltsin in brown shirts.
** In ''Literature/TheCaseOfTheToxicSpellDump'', there are backstory allusions to a "Leader" of the "[[IstanbulNotConstantinople Allemans]]", who set off the Second Sorcerous War.
* [[spoiler: The Bane]] from ''Literature/TheUnderlandChronicles'' - scarily good orator, possibly insane, [[spoiler:wreaks Holocaust-esque genocide on a group of innocent mice ("nibblers"). [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything He tells them that he is only "relocating" them yet again; however, this is discovered to be false when he traps them under a volcano and gasses them to death]]]].
* ''Literature/WarriorCats''. Tigerstar was originally from [=ThunderClan=], but came to power in [=ShadowClan=] during their darkest hour; Hitler was from Austria, but came to power in Germany during a low point in its history. Tigerstar merged [=RiverClan into ShadowClan=] to form [=TigerClan=]; Hitler merged Austria and Sudetenland into Germany to form Greater Germany. Like all good dictators, Tigerstar had his own secret police, consisting of Brokenstar's rogues and Darkstripe. He started imprisoning and mistreating [=halfClan=] cats, clearly planning to eventually kill them, because he claimed that they couldn't be trusted, and blamed them all that had ever gone wrong. And finally, up until she realised how evil he was, Sasha was the Eva Braun to Tigerstar's Hitler.
* ''Literature/WatershipDown's'' Efrafa warren has aspects of Nazism, Stalinism, and ancient Sparta. It's not really a straight-up allegory, since the Efrafrans aren't shown to be racist and their leader, General Woundwort, actually ''is'' the badass he likes to be seen as, but it is nonetheless a police state obsessed with security, fear of the outside, and physical perfection.
* The TV movie and the book ''Film/TheWave'' is about a teacher who starts a youth movement at a high school that is suspiciously close to Nazism, in order to teach AnAesop about how easy it is to get caught up in such a situation. It is based on a true story.
* In Robert Jordan's ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'', the False Dragon Mazrim Taim uses rank names that the Nazi used. This is more of a KickTheDog moment to show that Taim is evil and cannot be trusted, rather than trying to portray Taim as Hitler. He also refers to himself as the "M'Hael", or "Leader", and General Bashere is uncertain he's the real Taim because he's shaved his mustache, which may be a subtle LampshadeHanging.
* And there is Dr. Bob Mengele ("no relation") in ''Literature/WildCards''.
* In ''Literature/TheWandering'', the assembly of worshippers that Neshi witnesses on the world he winds up on worships a god that demands racial purity at all costs. Judging from the fact that one of their victims was a Jew, it seems to suggest that the last world Neshi ended up on was Earth.
* ''Literature/AgeOfFire'': The Wyrmmaster (the [[BigBad villain]] of the first book) and his followers are very strong parallels to the Nazis -- they view humans as the MasterRace, and ascribe to a paranoid delusion that the other hominid races (the elves, dwarves, and blighters) are all part of some grand conspiracy to keep humanity divided and weak. To this end, the Wyrmmaster starts capturing and breeding dragons as SlaveMooks so that his forces can [[FinalSolution wipe all the other races out]].
* The villains of ''{{Redwall}}'' installment ''Triss'' are the royal family of Pure Ferrets, who are pure white and deem themselves the only ones worthy to rule Riftgard while enslaving other species, and [[FunetikAksent shpeak mitt shtronk German accents]].
* The Archduchy of Crius in ''Literature/LucifersStar'' is a DownplayedTrope example of this as they're meant to have some fascist elements in order to make them ObviouslyEvil to the rest of the galaxy but they're actually more akin to UsefulNotes/WorldWarI Germans and a FeudalFuture group. Nevertheless, characters in-universe make comparisons due to their unchecked militarism and lust for conquest.
* ''Literature/TwilightoftheRedTsar'': Stalin. Oh boy, Stalin. How could someone arguably up there with Hitler get any worse? [[spoiler:Another holocaust, using nuclear and biological weapons (on fellow communists), and purging almost anyone who could have fixed his mess.]]
* ''Literature/YoungJediKnights'' had a non-Empire example with the [[AntiHumanAlliance Diversity Alliance]], an terrorist organization of aliens that sought to KillAllHumans. Albeit they have sympathetic backstory due to enduring mistreatment under the Empire's speciesist policies and their leader being [[Film/ReturnOfTheJedi Oola's]] half sister and a former slave herself, they still plotted to commit ''galaxy-wide genocide using chemical weapons no less''. The official illustrations go the extra mile by featuring [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/starwars/images/9/99/NolaaTarkona.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20070525180049 Nazi-like imagery]] with their charismatic leader giving a speech with the red and black flags of their group in the background.
* In the humorous fantasy novel ''Tres enanos y pico'', by spanish writer Ángel Sanchidrián, the blonde-haired, blue-eyed elves are incredibly racist against the "inferior" races, such as humans or goblins, but they especially hate dwarves, whose very existence oppresses them ... somehow. They plan a genocide against the "inferior" races, and it is explained that in the past they created a very powerful weapon in order to corrupt and demoralize the dwarves. [[spoiler: That weapon was beer ... It didn't work.]]
* In ''Literature/AnimalFarm'', Mr Frederick of Pinchfield Farm is Nazi Germany in the analogy. Frederick is known to torture his animals, uses anti-Animalist propaganda to keep them in line, and after making a deal with Napoleon which he immediately cheats him in, he attempts to seize Animal Farm in the Battle of the Windmill.
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