Robert Gellately challenges the belief that the German people knew little
about the Nazi terror, and the tendency of historians to distance ordinary
Germans from its excesses. He reveals for the first time the social consensus
behind the regime and the extent to which German men and women were involved
in the persecution of social outsiders and 'race enemies'.
Robert Gellately challenges the belief that the German people knew little
about the Nazi terror, and the tendency of historians to distance ordinary
Germans from its excesses. He reveals for the first time the social consensus
behind the regime and the extent to which German men and women were involved
in the persecution of social outsiders and 'race enemies'.