|
Loading... Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeshipírta: Brigitte Hamann
LibraryThing ajánlatokTagok ajánlásaiNincs. Betöltés...
nem fog tetszeni
valószínűleg nem fog tetszeni
valószínűleg tetszeni fog
tetszeni fog
imádni fogod Jelentkezz be, hogy megtudd, miért fog tetszeni neked ez a könyv. This fascinating book follows Hitler's life in pre WW1 Vienna until his move to Munich in 1913 and enlistment in the German army. Hamann builds a picture of the swirling multiethnic capital of the collapsing Austro-Hungarian empire, the 6th largest city in the world with it's extremes of wealth and poverty, collapsed parliament and intransigent nationalist parties, artistic flowering, racism and social Darwinist ideas. She uses original documents to show Hitler's reactions to this zeitgeist and absorption of the ideas of Lueger (populist mayor of Vienna), Schönerer (Pan Germanism) and Wagnerian heroic opera among much else. ( )nincsenek kritikák | kritika hozzáadása
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0195125371, Hardcover)Already a critically acclaimed bestseller in Germany and in Austria, Hitler's Vienna explores the critical, formative years which Hitler spent in Vienna, painting a fascinating portrait of the development of his ideas and career against the social, cultural, and political climate of the capitol of the Hapsburg Empire.Hitler's Vienna was not the artistic and intellectual center normally associated with Sigmund Freud, Gustav Mahler, Arthur Schnitzler, and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Instead, it was a cauldron of fear and indignation, a city teeming with the "little people" who rejected Viennese modernity as too international, too "Jewish," and too libertine. Indeed, Hitler's Vienna was a breeding ground for obscure political theories, usually propagated by disadvantaged men living together in hostels. To them, being "better" in this multinational city meant belonging to the "noble German people." Brigitte Hamann compellingly depicts the undercurrent of disturbing social and political ideologies that permeated this city of civil unrest. Drawing on previously untapped resources, she gives us the fullest account ever rendered of the young fuhrer. Hitler's Vienna reveals the vital connection between Hitler's indoctrination into the devastating racial politics that swept Germany's multinational state and the hotbed of nationalistic activity that was Vienna in the early 20th century. It is a profoundly important addition to present Hitler scholarship. (Amazonról letöltve Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||