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Unwilling Germans?: The Goldhagen Debate

Unwilling Germans?: The Goldhagen Debate Paperback - 1998 - 1st Edition

by Shandley, Robert R. (Edited by); Riemer, Jeremiah (Translated by)

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Few works of the past 50 years have stirred the German public as Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's HITLER'S WILLING EXECUTIONERS, which argues that Germans allowed the Holocaust not because they were forced to but out of conviction that killing Jews was morally just. UNWILLING GERMANS? traces the intense and varied reaction to Goldhagen's book.

Description

Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1998. x, 295 pages; 23 cm. Near fine. Tight, clean copy. Age toning. First paperback edition. "Daniel Johah Goldhagen's 'Hitler's Willing Executioners' argued that Germans committed the unthinkable acts of the Holocaust not because they were forced to but out of the conviction that killing Jews was morally just. This work traces the intense and varied reception of his book." - Publisher.. 1st. Paperback. Very Good. 8vo.
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About the author

Robert R. Shandley is assistant professor in the department of modern and classical languages at Texas A&M University.

Jeremiah Riemer is a translator who lives in Washington, D.C.