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KL

Audiobook
Nonfiction: History/Holocaust/Jewish
Unabridged   31 hour(s)
Publication date: 04/14/2015

KL

A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps

Available from major retailers or BUY FROM AMAZON
Audio CD ISBN:9781622317455
Digital Download ISBN:9781622317462

Summary

In a landmark work of history, Nikolaus Wachsmann offers an unprecedented, integrated account of the Nazi concentration camps from their inception in 1933 through their demise, seventy years ago, in the spring of 1945. The Third Reich has been studied in more depth than virtually any other period in history, and yet until now there has been no history of the camp system that tells the full story of its broad development and the everyday experiences of its inhabitants, both perpetrators and victims, and all those living in what Primo Levi called the gray zone.

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Product Description

In KL, Wachsmann fills this glaring gap in our understanding. He not only synthesizes a new generation of scholarly work, much of it untranslated and unknown outside of Germany, but also presents startling revelations, based on many years of archival research, about the functioning and scope of the camp system. Examining, close up, life and death inside the camps, and adopting a wider lens to show how the camp system was shaped by changing political, legal, social, economic, and military forces, Wachsmann produces a unified picture of the Nazi regime and its camps that we have never seen before.
A boldly ambitious work of deep importance, KL is destined to be a classic in the history of the twentieth century.

* Many books have explored the general history of the Holocaust and the Nazis, or anatomized individual concentration camps. But there has, surprisingly, never been a comprehensive history of the camps that integrates the stories of both the broad development of the system and daily life in the camps. In KL (the widely used acronym for konzentrationslager, German for concentration camps), Wachsmann offers an unprecedented account of the development of the camps, similar in scope and approach to Anne Applebaum's bestselling and award-winning Gulag: A History (2003). We will publish on the 70th anniversary of the liberation of most of the camps in April 1945.

*Wachsmann is the first to synthesize a new generation of original scholarship on the camps, much of it only available in German and little-known in the English-speaking world. And he has unearthed a wide range of new documents, offering startling new revelations about the history of the camps.

Reviews/Praise

Advance Praise: Nikolaus Wachsmann has written an admirable historical overview of the Nazi concentration camps, effectively combining decades of recent scholarship with his own original research. He captures both the trajectory of dynamic change through which the camp system evolved as well as the experiences and agencyhowever limited--of the prisoner community. This is an impressive and valuable book. - Christopher R. Browning (Frank Porter Graham Professor of History Emeritus, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) It is hard to imagine that Nik Wachsmann's superb book, surely to become the standard work on Nazi concentration camps, will ever be surpassed. Based on a huge array of widely scattered sources, it is a gripping as well as comprehensive and authoritative study of this grim but highly important topic. Ian Kershaw, author of The End: The Defiance and Destruction of Hitlers Germany, 1944 1945 Praise for Hitlers Prisons: "One of the most important books to be published on Nazi Germany in many years." Richard Evans "An outstanding piece of workone of the best studies of the Third Reich to appear for a long time. No serious future work on the Nazi state will be able to bypass this book." Sir Ian Kershaw

Author Bio

Nikolaus Wachsmann is a professor of modern European history at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is the author of the prizewinning Hitlers Prisons and a coeditor of Concentration Camps in Nazi Germany: The New Histories.