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Racism and the Third Reich
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
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References
1 Breitling, R., Die nationalsozialistische Rassenlehre (Meisenheim am Glan, 1971), p. 12.Google Scholar
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9 Read and Fisher, Kristallnacht, ch. 13.
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11 Benz, W., ‘The relapse into barbarism’, in Pehle, W. H. (ed.), November 1938. From ‘Kristallnacht’ to genocide (Oxford, 1991), ch. 1.Google Scholar
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14 Ibid. p. 34.
15 Barkai, A., ‘The fateful year 1938: the continuation and acceleration of plunder’, in Pehle, November 1938, p. 96.Google Scholar
16 Ibid. p. 121.
17 Graml, H., ‘The genesis of the Final Solution’, in Pehle, November 1938, p. 170.Google Scholar
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19 Mommsen, H., ‘What did the Germans know about the genocide of the Jews?’, in Pehle, November 1938, p. 219.Google Scholar
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21 Ibid. pp. 23–4.
22 Ibid. p. 50.
23 Ibid. pp. 94, 121.
24 Ibid. p. 136.
25 Gellately, R., The Gestapo and German society. Enforcing racial policy 1933–45 (Oxford, 1990)CrossRefGoogle Scholar and especially the paper ‘Surveillance and disobedience: aspects of the political policing of nazi Germany’, in Nicosia, F. R. and Stokes, L. D. (eds.), Germans against nazism. Essays in honour of Peter Hoffmann. Nonconformity, opposition and resistance in the Third Reich (Oxford, 1990), pp. 15ff.Google Scholar
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30 Ibid. p. 189.
31 Ibid. pp. 47–8.
32 Ibid. p. 85.
33 Ibid. ch. 18.
34 Ibid. p. 73.
35 Ibid. pp. 74–5.
36 Aly, G. and Heim, S., Vordenker der Vernichtung. Auschwitz und die deutschen Pläne für eine neue europäische Ordnung (Frankfurt am Main, 1993), p. 453.Google Scholar
37 Ibid. pp. 14–15.
38 Ibid. p. 297.
39 Ibid. pp. 382–8.
40 Ibid. p. 14.
41 For studies of the Government-General which underline the competitive style of government that operated there see Browning, C. R., The path to genocide (Cambridge, 1992), chs. 1, 2 and 6Google Scholar, Housden, M., ‘Hans Frank – empire-builder in the East, 1939–41’, European History Quarterly, XXIV (1994)Google Scholar and to a lesser extent Breitman, Architect of genocide.
42 My own biography of Helmut Nicolai, Brown House and Reich interior ministry planner, shows particularly clearly the often complicated relationship between ideas and actions that existed in the Hitler state. The study deals predominantly with the party-state conflict of 1933–35. Housden, Helmut Nicolai, ch. 9 ‘The Nicolai Era’ and ch. 10 ‘Summing up’.
43 See Laux, E., ‘Führung und Verwaltung in der Rechtslehre des Nationalsozialismus’, in Rebentisch, D. and Teppe, K. (eds.) Verwaltung contra Menschenführung im Staat Hitlers (Gottingen, 1986), p. 46.Google Scholar
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45 Ibid. p. 206.
46 Ibid. p. 297.
47 Ibid. pp. 354–5.
48 Ibid. p. 360.
49 Ibid. p. 374.
50 For a discussion of the Holocaust denial literature, see Vidal-Naquet, P., Assassins of memory. Essays on the denial of the Holocaust (Colombia, 1993).Google Scholar