The Racial State: Germany 1933-1945

by
Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1993-02-26
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

Between 1933 and 1945 the Nazi regime in Germany tried to restructure a ‘class’ society along racial lines. This book deals with the ideas and institutions which underpinned this mission, and shows how Nazi policy affected various groups of people, both victims and beneficiaries. The book begins with a serious discussion of the origins of Nazi racial ideology, and then demonstrates the thoroughness and purposiveness with which this was translated into official policy. The book deals with the systematic persecution not only of the Jews, the largest group of victims of Nazism, but also with the fate of lesser-known groups such as Sinti and Roma, the mentally handicapped, the 'asocial', and homosexuals. Finally, the book examines the racially-motivated social policies of the regime which affected every German ‘national comrade’. The authors argue that the Third Reich was fundamentally different from other totalitarian regimes because of the all-encompassing nature of its racial policies. These were neither exclusively reactionary nor ‘modern’, but were rather an unprecedented form of progress into barbarism.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations
ix
Foreword xiii
Acknowledgements xv
Introduction: why another book on the Third Reich? 1(4)
PART I THE SETTING 5(70)
How modern, German, and totalitarian was the Third Reich? Some major historiographical controversies
7(16)
Barbarous utopias: racial ideologies in Germany
23(21)
Barbarism institutionalised: racism as state policy
44(31)
PART II THE `PURIFICATION' OF THE BODY OF THE NATION 75(124)
The persecution of the Jews
77(36)
The persecution of Sinti and Roma, and other ethnic minorities
113(23)
The persecution of the `hereditarily ill', the `asocial', and homosexuals
136(63)
PART III THE FORMATION OF THE `NATIONAL COMMUNITY' 199(105)
Youth in the Third Reich
201(41)
Women in the Third Reich
242(25)
Men in the Third Reich
267(37)
Conclusion: National Socialist racial and social policy 304(4)
Notes 308(50)
Bibliographical essay 358(22)
Index 380

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