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Seduced by Hitler: The Choices of a Nation and the Ethics of Survival / Edition 1
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Seduced by Hitler: The Choices of a Nation and the Ethics of Survival / Edition 1
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
Seduced by Hitler: The Choices of a Nation and the Ethics of Survival / Edition 1
Current price: $19.99
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"A macabrely fascinating work…recommended."—
Booklist
It may seem impossible to explain how an entire nation could allow itself to be seduced by a man such as Adolf Hitler. By examining the everyday lives of Germans under Nazi rule,
Seduced by Hitler
proposes an explanation more complex, strange and morally ambiguous than one might imagine. In doing so, they bring to life the steady decline in national morality in the Third Reich as the German people let themselves be taken in by Hitler.
Drawing on new research and recently declassified documents, authors Adam LeBor, author of
Hitler's Secret Bankers
, and Roger Boyes,
The Times of London
correspondent in Berlin, reveal a tapestry of ordinary lives lived under extraordinary circumstances—ranging from subversion and confrontation to passive acceptance and eager complicity.
shows in startling detail how almost every waking hour of Hitler's reign offered insidious choices—from degrees of compromise to outright resistance—to the average German in their interactions with each other and the regime, whether at work, home or leisure.
Booklist
It may seem impossible to explain how an entire nation could allow itself to be seduced by a man such as Adolf Hitler. By examining the everyday lives of Germans under Nazi rule,
Seduced by Hitler
proposes an explanation more complex, strange and morally ambiguous than one might imagine. In doing so, they bring to life the steady decline in national morality in the Third Reich as the German people let themselves be taken in by Hitler.
Drawing on new research and recently declassified documents, authors Adam LeBor, author of
Hitler's Secret Bankers
, and Roger Boyes,
The Times of London
correspondent in Berlin, reveal a tapestry of ordinary lives lived under extraordinary circumstances—ranging from subversion and confrontation to passive acceptance and eager complicity.
shows in startling detail how almost every waking hour of Hitler's reign offered insidious choices—from degrees of compromise to outright resistance—to the average German in their interactions with each other and the regime, whether at work, home or leisure.