Peter FritzscheLife and Death in the Third Reich

Harvard University Press, 2008

by marshall poe on September 25, 2009

Peter Fritzsche

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Germans and Nazis. They were different things, right? I mean some Germans were members of the Party and believed all it said and some were not and believed none of what it said. True enough, but actually the relationship between the identity “German” and “Nazi” was a bit more complicated than “this” and “that.” The two were mixed, as Peter Fritzsche shows in his fascinating new book Life and Death in the Third Reich (Harvard UP, 2008). Peter looks at the artifacts left to us by ordinary Germans during the Third Reich–memoirs, diaries, letters, and so forth–in order to understand the ways in which their “German” identity was entangled in the Party’s “Nazi” identity. The result is an insightful study of the ways Germans thought about Germanness, about Germany, and about the Party that promised to restore both to greatness. Not surprisingly, different Germans thought about these things in different ways. More surprisingly–at least from my semi-educated standpoint–is that different Germans thought about them in different ways at different times. One of the most original contributions of the book is the documentation of the manner in which German attitudes toward the Nazis and their program evolved as events unfolded. The Germans of 1933 were not the Germans of 1938; and the Germans of 1938 were not the Germans of 1944. This is a terrifically interesting book and should be read by everyone interested in answering the fundamental question about Nazi Germany and its crimes: How could it have happened? Thanks to Peter’s book, we are a lot closer to an answer.

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{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

lukelea November 19, 2009 at 12:56 am

I am puzzled by how you can generalize about the attitudes of the German people towards Hitler and the Third Reich. Why no percentages? In this country (USA) one could never make such a broad generalization about political attitudes towards any controversial topic or party or movement. If people who failed to give the nazi salute were under suspicion, would not this cause a suppression of one’s true feelings? Of course it would. I would be surprised if at least a third of the German populace did not have serious misgivings about what was going on, but were afraid to say so. That is human nature.

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