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Hitler's Army: Soldiers, Nazis and War in the Third Reich (Revised)

Hitler's Army: Soldiers, Nazis and War in the Third Reich (Revised) - Paperback

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Availability:In StockContributor:Omer BartovSeries:Oxford PaperbacksPublish date:1992-11-26Pages:256
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780195079036ISBN-10:195079035UPC:9780195079036Book Category:HistoryBook Subcategory:Wars & Conflicts, Europe, MilitaryBook Topic:World War II, GermanySize:8.02 x 5.35 x 0.52 inchesWeight:0.4608Product ID:SCMRN1HRY8

As the Cold War followed on the heels of the Second World War, as the Nuremburg Trials faded in the shadow of the Iron Curtain, both the Germans and the West were quick to accept the idea that Hitler's army had been no SS, no Gestapo, that it was a professional force little touched by Nazi politics. But in this compelling account Omer Bartov reveals a very different history, as he probes the experience of the average soldier to show just how thoroughly Nazi ideology permeated the army. In Hitler's Army, Bartov focuses on the titanic struggle between Germany and the Soviet Union--where the vast majority of German troops fought--to show how the savagery of war reshaped the army in Hitler's image. Both brutalized and brutalizing, these soldiers needed to see their bitter sacrifices as noble patriotism and to justify their own atrocities by seeing their victims as subhuman. In the unprecedented ferocity and catastrophic losses of the Eastrn front, he writes, soldiers embraced the idea that the war was a defense of civilization against Jewish/Bolshevik barbarism, a war of racial survival to be waged at all costs. Bartov describes the incredible scale and destruction of the invasion of Russia in horrific detail. Even in the first months--often depicted as a time of easy victories--undermanned and ill-equipped German units were stretched to the breaking point by vast distances and bitter Soviet resistance. Facing scarce supplies and enormous casualties, the average soldier sank to ta a primitive level of existence, re-experiencing the trench warfare of World War I under the most extreme weather conditions imaginable; the fighting itself was savage, and massacres of prisoners were common. Troops looted food and supplies from civilians with wild abandon; they mercilessly wiped out villages suspected of aiding partisans. Incredible losses led to recruits being thrown together in units that once had been filled with men from the same communit

Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780195079036ISBN-10:195079035UPC:9780195079036Book Category:HistoryBook Subcategory:Wars & Conflicts, Europe, MilitaryBook Topic:World War II, GermanySize:8.02 x 5.35 x 0.52 inchesWeight:0.4608Product ID:SCMRN1HRY8
Omer Bartov is Visiting Raoul Wallenberg Professor at Rutgers University, and is the author of The Eastern Front, 1941-1945.
Publisher: Oxford University Press

Edition

Revised Edition

Contributor(s)

Omer Bartov

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