Broken lives : how ordinary Germans experienced the twentieth century

Broken Lives is a gripping account of the twentieth century as seen through the eyes of ordinary Germans who came of age under Hitler and whose lives were scarred and sometimes destroyed by what they saw and did.Drawing on six dozen memoirs by the generation of Germans born in the 1920s, Konrad Jara...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Jarausch, Konrad 1941- (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Princeton University Press
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Princeton Oxford : Princeton University Press, [2018]
Schlagworte:Deutschland Alltag Geschichte 1900-1999 Vergangenheitsbewältigung Alltagsgeschichte
Umfang:xiii, 446 Seiten
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Broken Lives is a gripping account of the twentieth century as seen through the eyes of ordinary Germans who came of age under Hitler and whose lives were scarred and sometimes destroyed by what they saw and did.Drawing on six dozen memoirs by the generation of Germans born in the 1920s, Konrad Jarausch chronicles the unforgettable stories of people who lived through the Third Reich, World War II, the Holocaust, and Cold War partition, but also participated in Germany's astonishing postwar recovery, reunification, and rehabilitation. Written decades after the events, these testimonies, many of them unpublished, look back on the mistakes of young people caught up in the Nazi movement. In many, early enthusiasm turns to deep disillusionment as the price of complicity with a brutal dictatorship--fighting at the front, aerial bombing at home, murder in the concentration camps-becomes clear.Bringing together the voices of men and women, perpetrators and victims, Broken Lives reveals the intimate human details of historical events and offers new insights about persistent questions. Why did so many Germans support Hitler through years of wartime sacrifice and Nazi inhumanity? How did they finally distance themselves from this racist dictatorship and come to embrace human rights? Jarausch argues that this generation's focus on its own suffering, often maligned by historians, ultimately led to a more critical understanding of national identity-one that helped transform Germany from a military aggressor into a pillar of European democracy
Beschreibung:Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 431-435
Beschreibung:xiii, 446 Seiten Illustrationen
ISBN:9780691174587
069117458X
9781400889334
1400889332