Hitler's Personal Prisoner: The Life of Martin Niemöller
Autor Benjamin Ziemann Traducere de Christine Brocksen Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 dec 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780192862587
ISBN-10: 0192862588
Pagini: 464
Dimensiuni: 160 x 243 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0192862588
Pagini: 464
Dimensiuni: 160 x 243 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
[This is] a seminal piece of scholarship. [...] A treatise that will be read and referenced for decades. This is a masterpiece in the revisionist biography genre.
It is Ziemann's achievement in drawing out both Niemöller's strengths and weaknesses with acuity and balance that makes this the best biography of Niemöller available.
Ziemann has written the definitive biography of Martin Niemöller. He replaces the post-war image of an iconic figure of resistance to Nazism with a compelling, far less flattering, interpretation. This emphasises the fervently held form of nationalist Protestantism, cultural antisemitism and rejection of liberal democracy that provided consistency to the seeming contradictions in Niemöller's thought and actions until well after 1945.
This book is a brilliant reexamination of one of the most obdurate of sacred cows, the myth of Martin Niemöller. Ziemann has done prodigious work in pushing past the postwar narrative so carefully curated by Niemöller's circle of confidants, to do what historians are supposed to do: get to the truth. By deploying a fact-driven methodology concerned with scrutinizing old truth-claims, Ziemann delivers the kind of probing reevaluation of Niemöller that we have waited literally decades to read.
Ziemann has succeeded in writing an impressively balanced account of a multi-faceted personality with a world-wide resonance. For all phases of his life, Ziemann sheds light on his protagonist's ambivalence. The one constant in Niemöller's life seems to have been his national Protestantism.
This is a meticulously researched, well-documented biography. It is a much needed addition to the literature on twentieth-century German Protestantism.
It is Ziemann's achievement in drawing out both Niemöller's strengths and weaknesses with acuity and balance that makes this the best biography of Niemöller available.
Ziemann has written the definitive biography of Martin Niemöller. He replaces the post-war image of an iconic figure of resistance to Nazism with a compelling, far less flattering, interpretation. This emphasises the fervently held form of nationalist Protestantism, cultural antisemitism and rejection of liberal democracy that provided consistency to the seeming contradictions in Niemöller's thought and actions until well after 1945.
This book is a brilliant reexamination of one of the most obdurate of sacred cows, the myth of Martin Niemöller. Ziemann has done prodigious work in pushing past the postwar narrative so carefully curated by Niemöller's circle of confidants, to do what historians are supposed to do: get to the truth. By deploying a fact-driven methodology concerned with scrutinizing old truth-claims, Ziemann delivers the kind of probing reevaluation of Niemöller that we have waited literally decades to read.
Ziemann has succeeded in writing an impressively balanced account of a multi-faceted personality with a world-wide resonance. For all phases of his life, Ziemann sheds light on his protagonist's ambivalence. The one constant in Niemöller's life seems to have been his national Protestantism.
This is a meticulously researched, well-documented biography. It is a much needed addition to the literature on twentieth-century German Protestantism.
Notă biografică
Benjamin Ziemann is Professor of Modern Germany at the University of Sheffield. He has gained his PhD from the University of Bielefeld, and has held visiting fellowships at Humboldt University Berlin, the University of York, the University of Jena, Oslo University and Kyoritsu Women's University in Tokyo.