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- Published on: 2009-12-01
- Binding: Hardcover
Kristallnacht 1938 Reveals the true depth and nature of popular antisemitism in Nazi Germany on the eve of the Holocaust. Full description
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.A new authority on Kristallnacht
By Mr. M. J. Nixon
Perhaps Kristallnacht was an event somewhat overshadowed after 1945 by the calamities of the Holocaust and the horrors of warfare. However, Kristallnacht is an incredibly important event in the history of Nazism and the holocaust, and Steinweis has arguably produced what is, to my mind, the new standard work on the topic.As with scholarship more widely since around 1989, a new generation of historians have began to question the German past much more critically and explore the ways in which 'ordinary Germans' are held responsible for Nazism and the Holocaust. Scholars, widely speaking, no longer see Nazism soley as the work of a few so-called 'Nazi's' or SA men - 'ordinary Germans' had their own part to play as well. As the final chapters of Steinweis' book illustrate, it has been the comforting and convenient historical norm in German to present Kristallnacht as a pogrom instigated primarily by the SA and the SS; Nazi's whom died out with the end of the Third Reich. But this is far from the truth.Up to recently, much of the literature has argued in a similar fashion. Some have pointed to the inclusion of the general population in the instigation of Kristallnacht, but none have really pointed this out to a great enough extent. Steinweis brings a refreshing set of revisions to the study of Kristallnacht which addresses these very problems with the false myths of the German path, and presents them perfectly.Using a unique set of sources, namely the post-1945 trial records, Steinweis decisively and convincingly builds the image of a pogrom instigated by a much large proportion of the German public than is often thought... He is very careful to acknowledge other strands of historiography, and I feel that he leaves very little left untouched, making this a very strong and well-rounded piece of scholarship.This book leaves one with compelling and disturbing new thoughts into how the Holocaust was eventually able to happen in German society. Seriously a must-read for anyone interested in the recent historiographical approach to perpetrators and 'ordinary Germans' in the Holocaust and before. You will not be disappointed!
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