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The Coming of the Third Reich, by Richard J. Evans

The Coming of the Third Reich, by Richard J. Evans



The Coming of the Third Reich, by Richard J. Evans

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The Coming of the Third Reich, by Richard J. Evans

There is no story in twentieth-century history more important to understand than Hitler’s rise to power and the collapse of civilization in Nazi Germany. A masterful synthesis of a vast body of scholarly work integrated with important new research and interpretations, Evans’s history restores drama and contingency to the rise to power of Hitler and the Nazis, even as it shows how ready Germany was by the early 1930s for such a takeover to occur. The Coming of the Third Reich is a masterwork of the historian’s art and the book by which all others on the subject will be judged.

  • Sales Rank: #2543664 in Books
  • Published on: 2016-05-24
  • Released on: 2016-05-24
  • Formats: Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 5.04" h x 1.13" w x 6.04" l,
  • Running time: 1272 minutes
  • Binding: Audio CD

From Publishers Weekly
On March 30, 1933, two months after Hitler achieved power, Paul Nikolaus, a Berlin cabaret comedian, wrote disconsolately, "For once, no joke. I am taking my own life.... [U]nfortunately I have fallen in love with my Fatherland. I cannot live in these times." How Germans could remain in love with their fatherland under Nazism and even contribute willingly to its horrific extremism is the subject of Cambridge historian Evans's gripping if overwhelmingly detailed study, the first of three projected volumes. Readers watch a great and historic culture grow grotesquely warped from within, until, in 1933, a dictatorial state was imposed upon the ruins of the Weimar republic. A host of shrill demagogues had, in the preceding decades, become missionaries to an uneasy coalition of the discontented, eager to subvert Germany's democratic institutions. This account contrasts with oversimplified diagnoses of how Nazism succeeded in taking possession of the German psyche. Evans asserts that Hitler's manipulative charisma required massive dissatisfaction and resentment available to be exploited. Nazism found convenient scapegoats in historic anti-Semitism, the shame of an imposed peace after WWI and the weakness of an unstable government alien to the disciplined German past. Although there have been significant recent studies of Hitler and his regime, like Ian Kershaw's brilliant two volumes, Evans (In Hitler's Shadow, etc.) broadens the historic perspective to demythologize how morbidly fertile the years before WWI were as an incubator for Hitler. 31 illus., 18 maps.
Copyright � Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
This is the first volume in a projected three-volume history of Nazi Germany. Cambridge history professor Evans states clearly that this is a work aimed at general readers who hope to gain a fuller and deeper understanding of the course and causes of the Nazi rise to power. Although he breaks no new ground, Evans has written a highly readable and comprehensive account. Thankfully, he does not fall into the trap of looking for proto-Nazis as far back as Luther; however, Evans credibly asserts that the roots of National Socialism can be uncovered in the Germany of Bismarck, which had all of the stresses and tensions of a rapidly modernizing society. While acknowledging that strains of virulent nationalism and anti-Semitism were prevalent in other European nations, Evans shows that these tendencies combined with other vulnerabilities in Germany in an especially volatile mix. This is a first-rate narrative history that informs and educates and may inspire readers to delve even deeper into the subject. Jay Freeman
Copyright � American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"Richard J. Evans's "The Coming of the Third Reich"...gives the clearest and most gripping account I've read of German life before aznd during the rise of the Nazis."--A. S Byatt, in the "Times Literary Supplement""Richard J. Evans's "The Coming of the Third Reich" is an enormous work of synthesis--knowledgable and reliable..."--Mark Mazower in the "New York Times Book Review""[A] first-rate narrative history that informs and educates and may inspire readers to delve even deeper into the subject."--"Booklist"."..Brilliant..."-"Washington Post""The generalist reader, it should be emphasized, is well served. ...The book reads briskly, covers all important areas--social and cultural--and succeeds in its aim of giving "voice to the people who lived through the years with which it deals."--"Denver Post ""One finally puts down this magnificent volume thirsty, on the one hand, for the next installment in the Nazi saga yet still haunted by the questions Evan poses and so masterfully grapples with."―Abraham Brumberg, "The Nation""This first part of what will be Evans' three-volume history of Hitler's regime is the most comprehensive and convincing work so far on the gall of Weimar and Hitler's rise to power."―"Foreign Affairs"

Most helpful customer reviews

36 of 36 people found the following review helpful.
One of the finer works on the rise of Nazism
By Reader in the rain
I am a 67 years old retired high school history teacher and have been studying Hitler and the Holocaust since reading Shirer's "Rise and Fall" when I was in the 6th grade over half a century ago. Since then I have pretty much devoured dozens of histories, hundreds of articles, and dozens more novels about the "what, how, and why" Hitler was able to rise to power and why the nascent anti-semitism that had been part of European culture for over a thousand years somehow morphed into the holocaust. My obsession with the subject stems from both my abiding passion for history and my realization that my father, who served in the Army Air Corps during WW II, was but two or three generations removed (depending which branch of the family tree was being examined) from his 100% German roots. Hence the thought occurred to me early on in my studies ; "What if one or more of our ancestors had not left Germany? Dad could just as easily been in the Luftwaffe, the SA, or even the SS, he was, after all, very patriotic.
So, since I have described how I came to read this book as well as my bonafides to review it I guess I should get on to my review. Evans' book is one of the finest I have ever read on both the roots of German culture in the years both preceding and after the Great War as well as how the Weimar Republic Collapsed into the Third Reich. The documentation is superb and the writing is interesting and compelling. Evans avoids the flaw incumbent in the work so many historians; "I researched this fact, it is going in the book, damn it!" which allows the work to move at a very nice pace. Many a night while reading the book I was staying up far past my bedtime because I simply could not put it down. I am very well versed in the subject matter but somehow Evans has managed to write a book that is readable and interesting to an expert such as I and is at the same time completely approachable and understandable to someone with but the most limited background in the period. I can hardly wait to immerse myself in the ensuing two volumes. However I do not expect the third volume to grip me quite so firmly as I am far more interested in how the Third Reich and its leader came to be than again reading a tale of the evil it did. If you are new to the detailed study of this subject I highly recommend reading this work and then moving on to Timothy Snyder's "Black Earth" a book that does a better job of explaining Hitler's political theories and philosophies than any other work I have read so far.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent explanation of the origins of the Third Reich
By Magnitude
As a long-time WWII buff, Evans's book deepened my understanding about the origins of the Third Reich. I'd recommend it to WWII students and anyone else who wants to learn about the period.

Evans focuses on the nature of German society at the time, and in a way de-emphasizes the role of Hitler himself in the coming of the Reich. Hitler, when put in the context of Germany as a whole, was just what Germany wanted. Evans explains why that is in this book.

The first words of the first chapter set the theme for the entire work: after 1918, Germany wanted another Bismarck, a strong leader. Many Germans were united in their common hatred of the imposed Weimar democracy. They also hated the Versailles treaty and its restrictions on Germany. While many right-wing groups had existed before and during the time of the Nazis, the Nazis succeeded through a combination of a strong message that they tailored to each audience; the personality of Hitler, which other parties across the political spectrum lacked; and strong-arm tactics on the streets. The Social Democrats were frequently associated with Weimar democracy and everything it represented; they also introduced policies such as emergency measures and using the Steel Helmets as paramilitaries to quell revolutions.

While many people voted Communist, one of the critical questions is why that party wasn't able to withstand the shift to the right and the Nazi onslaught. After all, the Communists had their own toughs who could (and did) fight the Brownshirts, and in many ways the Communists were the Nazis' chief rivals.

Although the Communists were anti-Weimar, the problem for many voters was that they were also anti-capitalist, and therefore were a threat to people's jobs. As a result, many middle class Germans didn't see the Communists as a viable alternative, even in the worst of the hyperinflation and, later, the Great Depression. The Social Democrats weren't able to establish effective measures during the Great Depression, and the Communists seemed content to passively wait until world capitalism collapsed.

In contrast, the Nazis offered everything that the Germans wanted: a Germany beyond parties, beyond old class divides, beyond politics, really. The Nazis promised a utopian vision of a Germany united by race. While this ideal would be hard for many mainstream voters to embrace today, then, in Germany, the party achieved electoral success in parliament based on it. It should be noted that not every German voted Nazi. Indeed, the Nazis never achieved an absolute or overwhelming parliamentary majority, but they did control enough Reichstag seats (about 40%) to become the dominant party in 1933.

The Nazi success opened the door for their eventual seizure of total power. Once they were included in a right-wing coalition government, the Nazis were able to establish a one-party state. Appointments of Nazis as internal ministers allowed them to co-opt police departments, which went along quite willingly with Nazi mandates. As Evans explains, it had been well established by the 1930s that "Communists"="criminals" anyway. The Reichstag fire furthered the assault on Communists through emergency decrees (again, with precedents set before the Nazis came to power). The Communist Reichstag deputies weren't allowed to vote on the Enabling Act by Goering, the chamber's president, a clearly illegal measure.

While the Nazis were clearly and openly anti-Semitic, virulently and violently so, this didn't seem to bother voters. Evans shows, using key examples from the arts and sciences, that many Germans (not everyone, of course) probably shared these beliefs in some measure. Too, the Nazis downplayed some of the worst aspects of their program to suit audiences' sentiments. The Nazis promised to end the chaos on the streets, which, as Evans points out, was often of the Nazis' own making. Political murders, book burnings, and concentration camps also occurred during this period. One is left with the impression that many Germans knew these things were going on, but either approved or looked the other way at these "excesses." Nazism billed itself as a movement, and while it generated jubilant displays of terror, perhaps these emotions would cool in time, perhaps once Hitler was in power, or taught respectability by Hindenburg. Perhaps.

Throughout, Evans relates the political and social circumstances with clear, concise prose. He uses examples of everyday people, and others in all walks of life, to illustrate the nature of German society at the time. He shows that Hitler didn't happen in a vacuum, and that in many ways Hitler's rise was a product of his time and place.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Essential Reading for Understanding the Nazi Rise to Power
By dtobisk
A very detailed yet wonderfully readable analysis of the rise of the German Nazi party from inception until the summer of 1933, 6 months after Hitler was made Chancellor and the Weimar republic was obliterated (the story is continued in two more volumes, both of which I’ve also read and to which I’d again give the highest rating). What makes THE COMING OF particularly fascinating is that Evans leads off his account in Chapter 1 with the question “Is it wrong to begin with Bismarck?”, citing various weaknesses in the government after Germany’s unification. Evans then goes on to discuss the many other elements--social Darwinism, anti-semitism, the infamous “stab-in-the-back” theory about defeat in The Great War, dread of communism, militarism, a weak judicial system, the 1929 Depression--that mixed together over the years with an unstable republic resulted in the Nazi--a tiny fringe group at first, but opportunists of the most extreme degree--regime’s rise to power. There’s much detail about the many elections and changes of government from 1918 to 1933, and though obviously key information, I found this less than scintillating. However, the account of how the Nazis consolidated their power throughout all aspects of German life and how they attempted to mold the entire culture into their desired shape is totally fascinating.

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