Exorcising Hitler
The Occupation and Denazification of Germany
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- $25.99
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- $25.99
Publisher Description
The collapse of the Third Reich in 1945 was an event nearly
unprecedented in history. Only the fall of the Roman Empire fifteen
hundred years earlier compares to the destruction visited on Germany.
The country's cities lay in ruins, its economic base devastated. The
German people stood at the brink of starvation, millions of them still
in POW camps. This was the starting point as the Allies set out to build
a humane, democratic nation on the ruins of the vanquished Nazi
state-arguably the most monstrous regime the world has ever seen.
In Exorcising Hitler,
master historian Frederick Taylor tells the story of Germany's Year
Zero and what came next. He describes the bitter endgame of war, the
murderous Nazi resistance, the vast displacement of people in Central
and Eastern Europe, and the nascent cold war struggle between Soviet and
Western occupiers. The occupation was a tale of rivalries, cynical
realpolitik, and blunders, but also of heroism, ingenuity, and
determination-not least that of the German people, who shook off the
nightmare of Nazism and rebuilt their battered country.
Weaving together accounts of occupiers and Germans, high and low alike Exorcising Hitler
is a tour de force of both scholarship and storytelling, the first
comprehensive account of this critical episode in modern history.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The complex, often contradictory project of ruling and defanging a defeated Germany is probed in this evocative but scattershot history. Starting with the apocalyptic close of WWII in Germany, its cities bombed to rubble and its population subjected to mass rape and other atrocities tongues were nailed to tables by the Red Army, British historian Taylor (The Berlin Wall) surveys the occupation policies of the Allied victors. His lucid narrative shows a variegated picture: brutal in the Soviet zone, relatively humane in the American, British, and French sectors, but everywhere a landscape of hunger, cold, and in German eyes humiliation. Lengthy chapters on efforts to bring to account millions of ex Nazi Party members shows these efforts to have been erratic, corrupt, and ineffective. Taylor makes excellent use of original sources to convey the occupation's psychological dimensions, but struggles with historical perspective. He overemphasizes sidelights, like the feeble Nazi Werwolf guerrilla resistance, but relegates crucial developments like currency reform and the resurrection of democratic politics to a sketchy epilogue. One gets the sense that it was the war itself that reconciled exhausted and disillusioned Germans to peace, and not the occupation, which emerges as a tense interlude between trauma and reconstruction. B&w inserts and maps.