Hitler's Deserters: Breaking Ranks with the Wehrmacht
Autor Douglas Carl Peiferen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 apr 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197539668
ISBN-10: 0197539661
Pagini: 312
Ilustrații: 5, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197539661
Pagini: 312
Ilustrații: 5, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Deeply researched and vividly written, this book skillfully interweaves the stories of Wehrmacht deserters, the military justice system that brutally punished them, and the postwar German societies that struggled to come to terms with the wartime past. Douglas Carl Peifer makes valuable contributions to both the literature on Germany's war effort and on the long shadow of the Nazi period in divided and reunited Germany after 1945.
Douglas Carl Peifer provides a riveting account of German deserters during World War II, some 20,000 of whom were tried and executed. Piecing together disparate sources, Peifer presents fascinating studies of individual deserters, their motivations, and their court-martial proceedings. He shines a light on the many reasons for the ultimate form of dissent, and the terrible price paid for it.
In postwar Germany it took almost 60 years to recognize Nazi injustice, overturn military court-martial verdicts, and rehabilitate the reputations of deserters. In this long-awaited study, the renowned military historian Douglas Carl Peifer provides a multifaceted survey of desertion in the Third Reich. It offers intriguing insights into the social, legal, and political roles of the military and its gradual re-evaluation after 1945.
This invaluable volume not only translates and interprets an enormous subject in one volume, but sheds all sorts of lights on the Nazi war machine and ideology.
A well-told tale, one that manages to humanise the victims of Nazi military justice and embed their individual narratives in a thorough examination of the world at war.
This work not only documents the range of German deserter experiences but also serves as a valuable prism through which to discuss the history of German military institutions and culture, and their place in Germany generally.
A detailed analysis... In a fascinating epilogue to the book, Peifer shows the broader relevance of his study to other cases of desertion and draft evasion, both historically and in the present day.
A masterful study of one of the most fraught topics in the history of Nazi Germany.... The book distinguishes itself not only by its breadth... but also by its sensitivity to the human dimensions of an act that could mean both moral resistance and a death sentence.
[A] fascinating and nuanced study of desertion in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War and its complicated legacy in postwar Germany.... Throughout the book, the author profiles several of Hitler's deserters ... his storytelling in these cases is rich and compelling, proving that great history can also make for page-turning reading.
A fantastically well-researched book, Peifer uses specific examples of soldiers in the Wehrmacht who faced charges of desertion or 'undermining the military spirit' during the Second World War. ...This is a compelling read, which is of relevance to anyone who wishes to have a deeper understanding of the impact of the Second World War on German society to this day.
Douglas Carl Peifer provides a riveting account of German deserters during World War II, some 20,000 of whom were tried and executed. Piecing together disparate sources, Peifer presents fascinating studies of individual deserters, their motivations, and their court-martial proceedings. He shines a light on the many reasons for the ultimate form of dissent, and the terrible price paid for it.
In postwar Germany it took almost 60 years to recognize Nazi injustice, overturn military court-martial verdicts, and rehabilitate the reputations of deserters. In this long-awaited study, the renowned military historian Douglas Carl Peifer provides a multifaceted survey of desertion in the Third Reich. It offers intriguing insights into the social, legal, and political roles of the military and its gradual re-evaluation after 1945.
This invaluable volume not only translates and interprets an enormous subject in one volume, but sheds all sorts of lights on the Nazi war machine and ideology.
A well-told tale, one that manages to humanise the victims of Nazi military justice and embed their individual narratives in a thorough examination of the world at war.
This work not only documents the range of German deserter experiences but also serves as a valuable prism through which to discuss the history of German military institutions and culture, and their place in Germany generally.
A detailed analysis... In a fascinating epilogue to the book, Peifer shows the broader relevance of his study to other cases of desertion and draft evasion, both historically and in the present day.
A masterful study of one of the most fraught topics in the history of Nazi Germany.... The book distinguishes itself not only by its breadth... but also by its sensitivity to the human dimensions of an act that could mean both moral resistance and a death sentence.
[A] fascinating and nuanced study of desertion in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War and its complicated legacy in postwar Germany.... Throughout the book, the author profiles several of Hitler's deserters ... his storytelling in these cases is rich and compelling, proving that great history can also make for page-turning reading.
A fantastically well-researched book, Peifer uses specific examples of soldiers in the Wehrmacht who faced charges of desertion or 'undermining the military spirit' during the Second World War. ...This is a compelling read, which is of relevance to anyone who wishes to have a deeper understanding of the impact of the Second World War on German society to this day.
Notă biografică
Douglas Carl Peifer is a Professor of Strategy and History at the US Air War College. His teaching and research interests focus on European history, contemporary European security issues; the World Wars; and mutiny, desertion, and dissent. Peifer's books include Choosing War: Presidential Decisions in the Maine, Lusitania, and Panay Incidents; Genocide, Airpower, and Intervention; and The Three German Navies. His articles have appeared in Contemporary European History, European Security, German Studies Review, Journal of Military History, Naval War College Review, Orbis, War and Society, and War in History.