Hitler’s Willing Executioners : Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust
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Na zalihi
Težina | 758 g |
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Format | 13 × 20 cm |
Autor | |
Izdavač | |
Mjesto izdanja | New York |
Godina | 1997 |
Broj stranica | 634 |
Uvez | Meki |
Stanje knjige | Vrlo dobro |
Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s Hitler’s Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust argues that the Holocaust was not carried out solely by a small group of fanatical Nazis, but rather with the active participation and complicity of ordinary Germans. Goldhagen contends that a deeply rooted eliminationist antisemitism permeated German society, making mass murder not only possible but widely accepted and even enthusiastically pursued by regular citizens, including police battalions and civil servants. Drawing on extensive archival research and firsthand accounts, the book details how these individuals, often from respectable backgrounds and with no prior criminal records, willingly participated in the systematic extermination of Jews, sometimes even exceeding their orders in cruelty and initiative. Goldhagen’s analysis challenges the notion that the perpetrators were coerced or simply following orders, highlighting evidence that many had opportunities to abstain from killing but chose not to. He documents how the normalization of violence, institutional support, and the dehumanization of Jews led to a chilling moral collapse, with perpetrators often displaying indifference or even zeal in their actions. The book’s controversial thesis has sparked significant debate, but it remains a landmark work for its focus on the cultural and psychological factors that enabled ordinary people to become active participants in genocide, suggesting that the Holocaust was as much a product of societal beliefs as it was of Nazi policy.