A collection of essays on Nazi Germany, edited and with an intro by Richard Bessel. As a whole, the collection is concerned with refuting some myths about the Third Reich: its emphasis on law and order and its bureaucratic nature, for example. In general, the essays lack direction and cohesion, often fail to give specific examples to their points and --- maddeningly --- fail to cite their quotes. The essays are:
"Political Violence And the Nazi Seizure Of Power," Richard Bessel. This essay attacks the commonly-held idea that Hitler's takeover was marked by an absence of large-scale violence. It was okay, but it could have been more direct in its thesis.
"Village Life In Nazi Germany," Gerhard Wilke. Using one village, Korle, as an example, Wilke shows that the supposedly rural-minded Nazi regime actually destroyed the traditional village life through instigating conflict between generations, etc. A good essay.
"Youth In the Third Reich," Detlev Peukert (tr. Richard Deveson). This essay discusses rebel youth: the Edelweiss Pirates and the middle-class "swing" club-goers, and argues that the more Hitler Youth used its authority, the more rebellion there was.
"Hitler And the Germans," Ian Kershaw. Although it lacks a specific argument, this essay examines the propaganda portrait of Hitler during and after the seizure of power. Well structured and convinces one how people could have accepted Hitler as a leader.
"The Nazi State Reconsidered," Michael Geyer. This essay argues that the Nazi State was not a unified bureaucracy but a mass of "unfettered competition". It also argues that the Nazi State did have a unified purpose: to promote ideological war and dominate others. The essay is extremely poorly written and its arguments incomprehensible.
"Nazi Policy Against the Jews," William Carr. Carr argues that Hitler's anti-Semitism was only one part of the Nazi anti-Jewish policy, and the Nazi solution was an improvisation constructed over time and modified according to events. The first part of the argument is not as strong, since the essay attributes many Nazi policies specifically to Hitler, but the second part is well supported.
"Social Outcasts In the Third Reich," Jeremy Noakes. A very informative essay on the Nazi sterilization and euthanasia programs for the "socially inefficient," and the oppression of the gypsies. It cites statistics, gives the background of the eugenics movement, and tries to explain the rationale behind the racial laws.
"Good Times, Bad Times: Memories Of the Third Reich," Ulrich Herbert (tr. R. Deveson). This is an analysis of the results of post-war surveys of German men about their lives. It argues that for the average worker, the war years were merely a non-political disturbance in the "normalcy" of the 1930s and then the 1950s, a continuation of same.