In Hitler's Shadow: West German Historians And The Attempt To Escape From The Nazi Past
Yet another detailed review of the recent German controversy over the Nazi past. Evans emphasizes that the right-wing historians have had a considerable and deleterious effect on the political culture of the Federal Republic. A book, sober and restrained, that regrets the polemical tone of the German debate and essentially reaffirms the view of liberal historians regarding the causes and consequences of National Socialism.
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The Afghanistan crisis has dramatized and intensified antecedent changes and strains in the Western alliance. There was unanimous, if separate, condemnation of Soviet aggression, but there were also divergent, and often acrimoniously divergent, assessments of the causes of aggression and the nature of the challenge. The difficulties of orchestrating a common response or of at least preventing a discordant one suggest a new balance of forces within the alliance and a set of divergent interests.
Daniel Goldhagen's book on the Holocaust--condemning the German "eliminationist" mindset toward Jews--has become an international bestseller and a datum in German-American relations. Pity, because it is a simplistic, monocausal, and unhistorical explanation of one of the most complex horrors in history. For Goldhagen, as for the Nazis, Hitler is Germany.
German history teaches that malice and simplicity have their appeal, that force impresses, and that nothing in the public realm is inevitable. It also proves that democratic reconstruction is possible, even on initially uncongenial ground.

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