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Backing Hitler:Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany

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9 Reviews
Oxford University Press, Mar 14, 2002 - History - 384 pages
The Nazis never won a majority in free elections, but soon after Hitler took power most people turned away from democracy and backed the Nazi regime. Hitler won growing support even as he established the secret police (Gestapo) and concentration camps. What has been in dispute for over fifty years is what the Germans knew about these camps, and in what ways were they involved in the persecution of 'race enemies', slave workers, and socialoutsiders.To answer these questions, and to explore the public sides of Nazi persecution, Robert Gellately has consulted an array of primary documents. He argues that the Nazis did not cloak their radical approaches to 'law and order' in utter secrecy, but played them up in the press and loudly proclaimed the superiority of their system over all others. They publicized their views by drawing on popular images, cherished German ideals, and long held phobias, and were able to win over converts to theircause. The author traces the story from 1933, and shows how war and especially the prospect of defeat radicalized Nazism. As the country spiralled toward defeat, Germans for the most part held on stubbornly. For anyone who contemplated surrender or resistance, terror became the order of theday.
  

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Review: Backing Hitler: Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany

User Review  - Eddy Allen - Goodreads

Debate still rages over how much ordinary Germans knew about the concentration camps and the Gestapo's activities during Hitler's reign. Now, in this well-documented and provocative volume, historian ... Read full review

Review: Backing Hitler: Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany

User Review  - Caitlin - Goodreads

Robert Gellately makes a meticulous and fascinating study of the public side of Nazi terror by seeking to explain the persistence of German popular consent amid increasing state violence -- the only ... Read full review

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Contents

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
LIST OF TABLES
Introduction
1Turning Away from Weimar
2Police Justice
3Concentration Camps and Media Reports
4Shadows of War
5Social Outsiders
Conclusion
NOTES
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10

6Injustice and the Jews
7Special Justice for Foreign Workers
8Enemies in the Ranks
9Concentration Camps in Public Spaces
10Dictatorship and People at the End of the Third Reich
Conclusion
A NOTE ON SOURCES
ABBREVIATIONS
INDEX
Copyright

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