Hitler's Willing Executioners

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A01=Simon Taylor
Adolf Hitler
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America
anti-Semitic
anti-semitism
Author_Simon Taylor
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battalion
Category1=Non-Fiction
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Christian Churches
Conquest
COP=United Kingdom
debate
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Eager
eliminationist
Eliminationist anti-Semitism
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Federal Republic Of Germany
Final Solution
German anti-Semitism
germans
goldhagen
Goldhagen Controversy
Goldhagen Thesis
goldhagens
Goldhagen’s Arguments
Goldhagen’s Book
Held
Hitler
Holocaust
Language_English
Main
Monk
ordinary
Ordinary Germans
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police
Postwar
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Reformation
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Sonderweg Thesis
Stammers Tom
Taylor Simon
Testimony

Product details

  • ISBN 9781912302604
  • Publication Date: 15 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Macat International Limited
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Daniel Goldhagen's study of the Holocaust offers conclusions that run directly counter to those reached by Christopher Browning, whose book Ordinary Men is also the subject of a Macat analysis. As such, the two analyses make possible some interesting critical thinking exercises focused on evaluation of the evidence used by the two historians. For Goldhagen, a chief reason for German actions was not the mundane good comradeship stressed by Browning, but a longstanding hatred of Jews and Judaism specific to Germany that dated back well into the previous century. Debating which historian is right, which has made better use of the available evidence, which has most successfully written objectively – and which advances the most secure interpretation of contested documents – forces students to think critically about one of the most important and (on the surface at least) incomprehensible events of the past century.

Dr Simon Taylor holds a PhD in Modern History from Columbia University. He is currently undertaking postdoctoral research at the University of Chicago.

Dr Thomas Stammers is lecturer in Modern European History at Durham University, where he specialises in the Cultural History of France in the age of revolution. He is the author of Collection, Recollection, Revolution: Scavenging the Past in Nineteenth-Century Paris. Dr Stammers’s research interests include a wide range of historiographical and theoretical controversies related to eighteenth and nineteenth-century Europe.