Burning the Reichstag : an investigation into the Third Reich's enduring mystery / Benjamin Carter Hett.
Description: 413 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmISBN:- 9780199322329
- 943.086 HET
- DD256.5 .H378 2014
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libro - Monografía | Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. Sala Ingles | 943.086 HET (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 037187 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 343-402) and index.
"Satanic nose": Rudolf Diels -- "SA + me": Joseph Goebbels -- "What just went on here is an absolute outrage": rumors -- "Those who know nothing are better off": the investigation -- Rival narratives: the propaganda battle -- "Stand up, van der Lubbe!": the trial and what followed -- The fire at Nuremberg: the prosecutors' tale -- "Persil letters": the gestapists' tale -- "The feared one": Fritz Tobias and his "clients" -- "Snow from yesterday": blackmail and the Institute for Contemporary History -- Conclusion: evidence and self-evidence.
Historian Hett (Crossing Hitler) applies his dual expertise as a scholar and former trial lawyer to reopen discussion of an aspect of Nazi Germany widely considered settled: who set the Reichstag on fire in 1933? The research of such historians as Fritz Tobias and Hans Mommsen have contributed to a general consensus that the fire, which inaugurated the final stage of Hitler's seizure of power, was the work of one man: Dutch Communist Martinus van der Lubbe. This was as the Nazis claimed--that the fire was the work of the Comintern. But the Communists contended that the arson was linked to the Nazis, and the issue is still debated today. Hett, using fresh sources and archives, presents a nuanced and complex perspective. In his telling, the fire emerges as "a tale launched, shaped, and reshaped by power and interest," right down to the present day. Hett painstakingly reconstructs the roots of the "rival narratives" about the fire that "snapped into place literally overnight." He is equally precise in demonstrating the dynamics of van der Lubbe's trial (ultimately, he was beheaded), and in raising the still-opaque question of direct Nazi involvement in the fire's setting. Hett's major contribution is his analysis of the trial as a case study in "a particular constellation of political pressure and the state of knowledge of Nazi crimes" in West Germany during the 1950s and 60s.
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