The good Germans : [resisting the Nazis 1933-1945] / Catrine Clay (Author)
Language: English Publication details: London : Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2020Description: 404 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmISBN:- 9781474607896 (pbk)
- 943.086
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Library of People's Majlis General/ Lending | General | G-EN 943.086 CLA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0000003089 |
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G-EN 941.085 RID My style of government : the Thatcher years / | G-EN 942.1 BAN The Banqueting whitehall palace house | G-EN 942.9 GRE Wales in 100 objects / | G-EN 943.086 CLA The good Germans : [resisting the Nazis 1933-1945] / | G-EN 943.905 HUN The 1956 Hungarian revolution : a history in documents / | G-EN 950.4 HAR Underground Asia : global revolutionaries and the assault on Empire / | G-EN 950.43 BOO Three tigers, one mountain : a journey through the bitter history and current conflicts of China, Korea, and Japan / |
Includes bibliographical index.
After 1933, as the brutal terror regime took hold, most of the two-thirds of Germans who had never voted for the Nazis - some 20 million people - tried to keep their heads down and protect their families. They moved to the country, or pretended to support the regime to avoid being denounced by neighbours, and tried to work out what was really happening in the Reich, surrounded as they were by Nazi propaganda and fake news. They lived in fear. Might they lose their jobs? Their homes? Their freedom? What would we have done in their place? Many ordinary Germans found the courage to resist, in the full knowledge that they could be sentenced to indefinite incarceration, torture or outright execution. Catrine Clay argues that it was a much greater number than was ever formally recorded: teachers, lawyers, factory and dock workers, housewives, shopkeepers, church members, trade unionists, army officers, aristocrats, Social Democrats, Socialists and Communists. Catrine Clay's ground-breaking book focuses on six very different characters: Irma, the young daughter of Ernst Thalmann, leader of the German Communists; Fritzi von der Schulenburg, a Prussian aristocrat; Rudolf Ditzen, the already famous author Hans Fallada, best known for his novel Alone in Berlin; Bernt Engelmann, a schoolboy living in the suburbs of Dusseldorf; Julius Leber, a charismatic leader of the Social Democrats in the Reichstag; and Fabian von Schlabrendorff, a law student in Berlin. The six are not seen in isolation but as part of their families: a brother and sister; a wife; a father with three children; an only son; the parents of a Communist pioneer daughter. Each experiences the momentous events of Nazi history as they unfold in their own small lives - Good Germans all
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