9780393046717-0393046710-Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris

Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris

ISBN-13: 9780393046717
ISBN-10: 0393046710
Author: Ian Kershaw
Publication date: 1999
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Format: Hardcover 912 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780393046717
ISBN-10: 0393046710
Author: Ian Kershaw
Publication date: 1999
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Format: Hardcover 912 pages

Summary

Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris (ISBN-13: 9780393046717 and ISBN-10: 0393046710), written by authors Ian Kershaw, was published by W. W. Norton & Company in 1999. With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other United States (Historical, Political, Leaders & Notable People, Germany, European History, World War II, Military History) books. You can easily purchase or rent Hitler: 1889-1936 Hubris (Hardcover, Used) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used United States books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $2.82.

Description

Hailed as the most compelling biography of the German dictator yet written, Ian Kershaw's Hitler brings us closer than ever before to the heart of its subject's immense darkness.

From his illegitimate birth in a small Austrian village to his fiery death in a bunker under the Reich chancellery in Berlin, Adolf Hitler left a murky trail, strewn with contradictory tales and overgrown with self-created myths. One truth prevails: the sheer scale of the evils that he unleashed on the world has made him a demonic figure without equal in this century. Ian Kershaw's Hitler brings us closer than ever before to the character of the bizarre misfit in his thirty-year ascent from a Viennese shelter for the indigent to uncontested rule over the German nation that had tried and rejected democracy in the crippling aftermath of World War I. With extraordinary vividness, Kershaw recreates the settings that made Hitler's rise possible: the virulent anti-Semitism of prewar Vienna, the crucible of a war with immense casualties, the toxic nationalism that gripped Bavaria in the 1920s, the undermining of the Weimar Republic by extremists of the Right and the Left, the hysteria that accompanied Hitler's seizure of power in 1933 and then mounted in brutal attacks by his storm troopers on Jews and others condemned as enemies of the Aryan race. In an account drawing on many previously untapped sources, Hitler metamorphoses from an obscure fantasist, a "drummer" sounding an insistent beat of hatred in Munich beer halls, to the instigator of an infamous failed putsch and, ultimately, to the leadership of a ragtag alliance of right-wing parties fused into a movement that enthralled the German people.

This volume, the first of two, ends with the promulgation of the infamous Nuremberg laws that pushed German Jews to the outer fringes of society, and with the march of the German army into the Rhineland, Hitler's initial move toward the abyss of war.

Black-and-white photos throughout
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