
Reckonings
Legacies of Nazi Persecution and the Quest for Justice
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Narrated by:
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Christa Lewis
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By:
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Mary Fulbrook
About this listen
Mary Fulbrook's encompassing book explores the lives of individuals across a full spectrum of suffering and guilt, each one capturing one small part of the greater story. Using "reckoning" in the widest possible sense to evoke how the consequences of violence have expanded almost infinitely through time. Fulbrook exposes the disjuncture between official myths about "dealing with the past" and the extent to which the vast majority of Nazi perpetrators evaded responsibility.
In the successor states to the Third Reich - East Germany, West Germany, and Austria - prosecution varied widely. Communist East Germany pursued Nazi criminals and handed down severe sentences; West Germany, caught between facing up to the past and seeking to draw a line under it, tended toward selective justice and reintegration of former Nazis; and Austria made nearly no reckoning at all until the mid-1980s, when news broke about Austrian presidential candidate Kurt Waldheim's past. The continuing battle with the legacies of Nazism in the private sphere was often at odds with public remembrance and memorials.
©2018 Mary Fulbrook (P)2020 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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Performance
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Performance
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Story
Understanding Adolf Hitler's ideology provides insights into the mental world of an extremist politics that, over the course of the Third Reich, developed explosive energies culminating in the Second World War and the Holocaust. Too often the theories underlying National Socialism or Nazism are dismissed as an irrational hodgepodge of ideas. Yet that ideology drove Hitler's quest for power in 1933, colored everything in the Third Reich, and transformed him, however briefly, into the most powerful leader in the world.
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Fascinating listen
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The Undertow
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- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
An unmatched guide to the religious dimensions of American politics, Jeff Sharlet journeys into corners of our national psyche where others fear to tread. The Undertow is both inquiry and meditation, an attempt to understand how, over the last decade, reaction has morphed into delusion, social division into distrust, distrust into paranoia, and hatred into fantasies—sometimes realities—of violence.
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I'm just not feeling this one....
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By: Jeff Sharlet
What listeners say about Reckonings
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- Jeff Lacy
- 03-13-20
Extraordinary book and brilliant performance
This is an extraordinary book that seeks to “understand not only what happened during the Nazi era and its immediate impact but also the ways in which this past has continued to be of significance among members of subsequent generations” of victims and perpetrators of the Holocaust. In contrast to a multiple of recent books about the Nazi concentration and labor camps, Fulbrook concentrates on individual survivors and perpetrators. Intelligently written, it is emotive and profound. Christa Lewis does an outstanding job narrating.
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- Public name
- 05-07-24
Fascinating and thought-provoking
Highly recommended. Appropriate for all listeners regardless of the level of knowledge about Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. I haven't learned as much from one book since I discovered Sarah Helms' Ravensbrück.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Dianne
- 01-16-23
Perfect
This thorough study of postwar handling of Holocaust crimes isn’t just a legal proceeding log, but an all encompassing survey of the political, economic, religious, and social differences in how each Holocaust affected region pursued justice, what constituted justice, what constituted a crime, how the proceedings were received by the public, the world, and its repercussions. She discusses how it has all evolved over time…what defines justice, what identifies a perpetrator, or a victim, and how should it all be memorialized? This book answered questions I’ve always had and many I didn’t know I had.
The US could use this as a thought project or study guide for coming to terms with our own violent past of human slavery. This book shows that while opportunities for obtaining justice against individual perpetrators are long gone, a collective reckoning with a violent, unjust and shameful past is, at least, pursuable.
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- ashley shannon
- 06-24-23
A bit disappointed
This book was okay, but the author's contempt for the perpetrators resulted in a more one dimensional assessment than I was expecting. It didn't seem like she was very interested in what german civilians who stood by and did nothing had to say for themselves, which is understandable but meant that I didn't get as much perspective as I had hoped for.
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