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Review: The Third Reich At War

A magisterial trilogy on the Third Reich with an authoritative account of Hitlerian ideology.

January 8, 2009 16:41
Hitler with Italian dictator Mussolini in 1943. The Nazi leader’s plan to murder Europe’s Jews was a core policy

By

David Cesarani,

David Cesarani

2 min read

By Richard Evans
Allen Lane, £30

In most Second World War histories that appeared in Britain from the 1940s until the 1980s there was little about antisemitism or the persecution and mass murder of Europe’s Jews. Few biographies of Hitler made this central to his world view or a determining influence on his conduct of the war. British researchers tended to focus on social history. Some of the best were constrained by a Marxist or functionalist approach that demoted the significance of ideology, including Nazi racism.

Over the past 15 to 20 years, though, ideology has come roaring back. And, thanks largely to the work of Sir Ian Kershaw, Hitler is once more installed as the driving force of Nazi policy. Now, in the preface to the third volume of his magnificent history of Nazi Germany, Richard Evans makes no apology for the fact that “the mass murder of the Jews is dealt with in almost every part of the book”. This reflects “its centrality to so many aspects of the Third Reich at war”. It is “an inescapable part of the story”. While he charts the impact of Nazi racial policies at home and in Nazi-dominated countries on Slavs, Gypsies and homosexuals, he does not shrink from asserting the singularity of Nazi “Jewish policy”.

The occupation of Poland in September 1939 provided the laboratory for Hitler’s plans to restructure Europe on racial lines. Hard-core Nazis were appointed to the colonial administration. The army, already shot through with antisemitism and racism, barely protested against the atrocious treatment of Jews and Poles.

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