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The Third Reich: A New History

The Third Reich: A New History

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Author: Michael Burleigh
Publisher: Pan Books
Category: Book

List Price: £10.99
Buy New: £7.69
You Save: £3.30 (30%)



Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 21622

Media: Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 992
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.2 x 2

ISBN: 0330487574
Dewey Decimal Number: 940
EAN: 9780330487573
ASIN: 0330487574

Publication Date: July 6, 2001
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Third Reich: A New History
  • Paperback - The Third Reich: A New History

Similar Items:

  • The Third Reich in Power, 1933-1939
  • The Hitler Myth: Image and Reality in the Third Reich
  • Hitler, 1889-1936: Hubris
  • Hitler, 1936-1945: Nemesis (Allen Lane History)
  • The Nazis - A Warning From History [1997]

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Humans have a fascination with evil. We long to identify it, quantify it and understand it. To this end, newspapers frequently splash photographs of murderers with the caption, "The face of evil." Heading most lists of the 20th-century's most evil people would be Adolf Hitler but, as Michael Burleigh's tour de force makes clear, evil is not always as cut and dried as we would like. The Nazis could not have come to power and committed Germany to a policy of war and genocide without the tacit consent of the German people. This makes Germany as a whole responsible for the crimes committed in its name, but it is clearly wrong to label each and every German as evil. Through his painstaking research and direct prose, Burleigh slowly builds up a picture of a people desperate for identity and economic prosperity who, bit by bit, closed off their conscience as the price of their dreams. There was no one cathartic moment when Germany, under the Third Reich, lapsed from goodness into badness; rather there was an incremental realignment of a collective morality. Burleigh's explanation of this phenomenon is so simple and yet so obviously right, that you can only wonder that it hadn't become the generally accepted currency years back. Instead of viewing Nazi Germany in purely social, political and economic terms--though he doesn't ignore these spheres --Burleigh wraps them all into a picture of a country gripped in a religious, messianic fervour and that which had previously felt inexplicable suddenly seems crystal clear. If you want the nitty-gritty details of the Second World War and the genocide, then they are here, as well, if not better, retold than many of the other histories of this period. But it's Burleigh's take on the ordinary people of Germany that makes this book so special. Above all, with similar genocidal wars currently being fought in Kosovo, Rwanda and Iraq, it makes you think, "Would I be able to resist becoming complicit in such regimes?" This is a must for every 20th-century historian.--John Crace


Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A novel approach and fascinating new research.   January 29, 2002
20 out of 20 found this review helpful

Burleigh's history of the Third Reich carefully avoids the blow-by-blow immediacy of other classic histories such as Shirer's "Rise and Fall of the Third Reich". Instead, he concerns himself with the psychological landscape of the Reich; the conceits and lies that led a a nation and a continent to the brink of destruction.

Readers who are looking for the whys and wherefores of defeats on the battlefield will not find them here - this is not a simple military history. Readers who are looking for moral insight into why regimes as evil as the Third Reich can develop and thrive will be richly rewarded by a masterful portrait of an evil state.

Never has Arendt's "banality of evil" been better illustrated than in this remarkable book.

A chilling warning of the horrors that complacency, apathy and uncritical acceptance of our political leaders can bring about. A masterpiece.


5 out of 5 stars Announces a challenge to the simply historical and political   October 29, 2000
joshwhelan@aol.com (London)
32 out of 35 found this review helpful

It's most disappointing to read comments from readers, which misrepresent the work under review. Michael Burleighs extraordinary The Third Reich: A New History is the most subtle, sensitive and authoritative book I have yet read on this most difficult subject. Obviously a distillation of years of intense reflection, reading and research it is hard to imagine a future scholarly work that will match the skill with which Burleigh engages the reader so successfully in the moral and ethical dimensions of this terrible story. Driven by a sensibility that pours scorn on simplistic 'political' judgements, Burleigh attempts to confront the difficulty of understanding the Nazi system from a perspective (and style) which means that this brilliant work is not for those that seek easy answers. In this sense, The Third Reich is a work that announces a challenge to the simply historical or political.


5 out of 5 stars AN IMPORTANT CONTRIBUTION   February 16, 2004
Luciano Lupini (Caracas Venezuela)
20 out of 22 found this review helpful

Although it is not an easily readable book, for the general public, if you have a serious interest about the history of the third Reich, make no mistake: you will not be able to overlook this book, which will surely be a classic. It is a thoroughly well researched contribution about the connection between religious beliefs and mass fanaticism; the interaction between the "new" domestic and international values, based on aggression; and the other causes involved in the rise (and fall) of the III Reich. From a different perspective from other mainstream historians, this winner of the Samuel Johnson prize for non fiction, has accomplished quite an original scholarly feat, one which will enlighten the comprehension of this particular period of history. No wonder many international critics have found the subtitle of this opus -A new History- particularly well deserved. Of great interest is the chapter related with the demise of the rule of law, a thorough analysis of the penetration of the judiciary and the subordination of the police and government to the totalitarian Fuhrerprinzip.


5 out of 5 stars 1st Class History from a 1st Class Historian   May 24, 2002
brian.shanahan@blueyonder.co.uk (London)
16 out of 18 found this review helpful

Having read a number of histories of the Third Reich, I was greatly impressed by this great book. If your looking for chronological history, this is not for you, but if you want to gain some insight into how a culturally mature and diverse nation committed such huge crimes against humanity and themselves, this book hits the spot. The lesson of this book is that their is a potential evil in us all that can be tapped by amoral politicians. We should always be wary of populists!
There is a great example of one of the leaders of the extermination squads in the Ukraine, whose alter ego was being a deeply committed family man. This I believe is the potential human paradox. How can we be both at the same time?



5 out of 5 stars How can any one human brain balance so much information   September 3, 2003
15 out of 17 found this review helpful

Being German and with my Grandfather having fought in the war (who is one of the most gentles soles I have ever met) I developed a huge appetite to establish as to how one organisation, the Nazis, could turn a nation into killers.

Having read numerous books on the topic each of these took a particular area and “fleshed out the facts on a time line” leaving me to piece together the human elements to try and establish the “bigger picture”, however it always left holes.

And then I read “A new history”. Unlike all other books, this takes a key area, be it the rise to power, be it the holocaust and the de-sensitisation of the population, be it operation Barbarossa, etc. and reviews these form a social, political and military (and more) view points, and at times from 1922 till the end of the third Reich. I can but only express my complete and utter awe (and I am a very critical guy) at this piece of work. Well done Mr. Burleigh!

If you are interested the history of the Third Reich... get it!!!

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