How could this happen Explaining the Holocaust

Dan McMillan

Book - 2014

"The Holocaust has long seemed incomprehensible, a monumental crime that beggars our powers of description and explanation. Historians have probed the many sources of this tragedy, but no account has united the various causes into an overarching synthesis that answers the vital question: How was such a nightmare possible in the heart of Western civilization? In How Could This Happen, historian Dan McMillan distills the vast body of Holocaust research into a cogent explanation and comprehensive analysis of the genocide's many causes, revealing how a once-progressive society like Germany could have carried out this crime. The Holocaust, he explains, was caused not by one but by a combination of factors--from Germany's failure t...o become a democracy until 1918, to the widespread acceptance of anti-Semitism and scientific racism, to the effects of World War I, which intensified political divisions within the country and drastically lowered the value of human life in the minds of an entire generation. Masterfully synthesizing the myriad causes that led Germany to disaster, McMillan shows why thousands of Germans carried out the genocide while millions watched, with cold indifference, as it enveloped their homeland. Persuasive and compelling, How Could This Happen explains how a perfect storm of bleak circumstances, malevolent ideas, and damaged personalities unleashed history's most terrifying atrocity"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Basic Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Dan McMillan (-)
Physical Description
xi, 276 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780465080243
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Posing the Question
  • Chapter 2. A Genocide Like No Other
  • Chapter 3. Why Germany?
  • Chapter 4. A World of Enemies
  • Chapter 5. Hardened by War
  • Chapter 6. Division and Disaster
  • Chapter 7. Why Hitler?
  • Chapter 8. From Dictator to Demigod
  • Chapter 9. Why the Jewish People?
  • Chapter 10. Hatred as Science
  • Chapter 11. The Absent Moral Compass
  • Chapter 12. What They Knew
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

While many books have been written on the Holocaust, this volume claims to be the "first comprehensive analysis" of its causes. McMillan, a specialist in German history, addresses multiple factors, including an authoritarian tradition in German politics dating to the 1860s, a long history of German anti-Semitism, the demoralizing loss of WWI, the weakness and collapse of the Weimar Republic, the influence of Darwinian thought on notions of a German "racial struggle" against the Jews, and Hitler's rise "from dictator to demigod." McMillan's best chapter, "The Absent Moral Compass," surveys postwar psychological experiments to explain how even non-ideologues in the German bureaucracy and army could be led to murder, thanks to "automatic obedience to authority; conformity to the behavior of a group, and adaptation to a role and situation." McMillan's analysis is succinct, yet its relative brevity is occasionally a weakness, as when he claims, without sufficient evidence, that a "genocidal cohort" of men, hardened by their experience in WWI, were instrumental in implementing the "Final Solution." Despite this flaw, and the idea that no truly comprehensive explanation for the Holocaust seems possible, this thoughtful work examines both why the Nazis came to power and how they could engage in murder on such an unprecedented scale. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved