BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ESSAY
Avon, 336 pp., $1.65 (paper)
Fawcett, 256 pp., $.95 (paper)
Norton, 990 pp., $4.95 (paper)
International Universities Press, vol. 1 pp., $12.00
Random House, 300 pp., $1.95 (paper)
Beacon Press, 280 pp., $2.25 (paper)
Ballantine, 428 pp., $1.65 (paper)
Berkley, 192 pp., $.75 (paper)
Harper & Row, 320 pp., $2.25 (paper)
Oxford University Press, 518 pp., $3.50 (paper)
As Hitler's hysterically racist version of fascism year by year strengthened itself in Germany and then spread all over Europe, a generation of intellectuals, not to mention millions of ordinary men and women, had to confront some unsettling questions. Could 'it' (Nazism) happen here or there or, indeed, anywhere? How did the nation of Beethoven and Brahms, Goethe and Schiller and Gropius turn itself over to a bunch of thugs, murderers, and confidence men? Was there something special about such a turn of events, something rooted in the German 'national character,' in a particular people's history and culture? And anyway, why did the Führer's racial hate, directed at so many segments of the world's population, strike so many responsive chords: enthusiastic applause; discreet approval; sympathy; the embarrassed silence of those who suddenly heard spoken on a grand scale what hitherto had to be whispered or joked about in private?
Review, 7065 words
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