The Oxford History of the Third Reich 2nd Edition Earl Ray Beck Professor Of History Robert Gellately – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780192886859, 0192886851
Product details:
- ISBN 10:0192886851
- ISBN 13:9780192886859
- Author: Earl Ray Beck Professor Of History, Robert Gellately
The Oxford History of the Third Reich
Table contents:
1. The Weimar Republic and the Rise of National Socialism
The Radical Right in Post‐War Bavaria and the Early Nazi Party
Crisis Year 1923
Relative Stabilization
The Great Depression and its Consequences
Who Supported the Nazis?
The Path to Power
2. The Nazi ‘Seizure of Power’
The Dictatorship Takes Shape
‘Revolution’ and Violence
The Allure
Boycott, Censorship, and Gleichschaltung
The End of Revolution
Stillborn Second Revolution and Consolidation
3. Elections, Plebiscites, and Festivals
Participatory Traditions in the Dictatorship
Electoral Techniques
Mobilization and Modernity
Disciplinary Action, Complicity, Resistance
Political Festivals in the ‘Third Reich’
The Nazis’ ‘Festival Calendar’
Führer Myth and ‘National Community’: the Function of Political Festivals
4. Architecture and the Arts
Architecture
The Visual and Plastic Arts
Music
Literature
Conclusions
5. Photography and Cinema
Going to the Movies in the Third Reich
Germans taking Photographs
The German War in the BIZ
The War at the Movies
German Soldiers Photograph the War
Other Encounters with Photography and Film
The Camera as Weapon
1945
The Afterlife of Third Reich Photography and Film
6. The Economy
Recovery
Self‐sufficiency
Conquest
Struggling to Survive
7. The Holocaust
Historiography
Origins
Judenpolitik
Mass Murder
Grey Zones
Motivations
Aftermath
8. War and Empire
War
The German Empire
The Social Structure of Occupation
Life Under Occupation
Summary
9. The Home Front
Introduction
Morale at War’s Outset
Initial Successes
Adjusting to Prolonged and Brutal Conflict
Drawing on the Resources of Occupied Europe: Food
Drawing on the Resources of Occupied Europe: Workers
Public Knowledge of Measures Against the Jews
Carrying on after Stalingrad
Women and War
Responding to Aerial Bombing
Growing Threats and Final Collapse
Conclusion
10. Decline and Collapse
When did the War Become Unwinnable?
The Third Reich Reaches its Peak
War Comes to the Fatherland
The Changing Dictatorship
The Fatherland in Disarray
‘Community of the People’ on the Way to Collapse
The Imponderables of War
Appendix: Daily Inmate Numbers in the SS Concentration Camps, 1934–45
Further Reading
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