Protest in Hitler's "national community" : popular unrest and the Nazi response /
That Hitler's Gestapo harshly suppressed any signs of opposition inside the Third Reich is a common misconception. This book presents studies of public dissent that prove this was not always the case. It examines circumstances under which "racial" Germans were motivated to protest, as...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
Berghahn Books,
2015.
|
Colección: | Protest, Culture & Society.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction: Nazi responses to popular unrest among the volk of the Reich / Nathan Stoltzfus
- Aspects of German procedures in the Holocaust / Gerhard Weinberg
- Women and protest in wartime Nazi Germany / Jill Stephenson
- The demonstrations in support of the Evangelical Land Bishop Hans Meiser : a successful protest against the Nazi regime? / Christiane Kuller
- The Catholic Church, Bishop von Galen and "euthanasia" / Winfried Suss
- Possibilities of protest in the Third Reich : the Witten demonstration in context / Julie Torrie
- The "legend" of women's resistance in the Rosenstrasse / Katharina von Kellenbach
- Auschwitz, the Fabrik-Aktion, Rosenstrasse : a plea for a change of perspective / Joachim Neander
- The 1943 Rosenstrasse protest and the churches / Antonia Leugers
- Protest and aftermath : popular protest in Nazi German history / Nathan Stoltzfus
- Afterword: Protest and resistance / David Clay Large
- Appendix I: The situation of the Mischlinge in Germany, mid-March 1941 / by Gerhard Lehfeldt
- Appendix II: Public decree of the district administrator of the Calau District, Calau, February 25, 1943
- Appendix III: 1 April 1943 OSS document identifying protest in Berlin with the interruption of deportation of Jews
- Appendix IV: Translated excerpts from the diaries of Joseph Goebbels
- Appendix V: Excerpts from testimonies of women who protested for their Jewish husbands in response to a request from the Berlin Bureau of Reparations, 1955
- Appendix VI: Excerpts of individual sections and paragraphs from legal texts and ordinances (1933-1941)
- Appendix VII: RSHA guidelines for deportation to Auschwitz, Berlin, 20 February 1943
- Appendix VIII: Documents of the SS at Auschwitz from early March 1943 indicating their "pull" for workers from Berlin and their expectation that more working Jews (intermarried) would be sent from Berlin
- Appendix IX: Documents in response to the Witten protest and from 1944 indicating Hitler's continuing refusal to use force against "racial" civilians who refused to follow regime guidelines for evacuating bombed areas
- Appendix X: Excerpts from the recent German press representing controversies about public protest by ordinary Germans in the Third Reich.