Architects of Annihilation: Auschwitz and the Logic of Destruction
Hardcover
- Price:
- $57.00
- ISBN:
- Published:
- Mar 17, 2003
- Copyright:
- 2003
- Pages:
- 384
- Size:
- 6 x 9.25 in.
- 20 line illus.
- Main_subject:
- History
- For sale only in the United States, US Dependencies, and the Philippines
Two of Germany’s most provocative investigative historians examine the frightening role of young educated careerists in building the Holocaust’s ideological and material infrastructure. Moving from the waning Weimar Republic to Auschwitz’s fully operating gas chambers, Architects of Annihilation shows how the unthinkable technocratic 鈥渟olutions鈥 to Germany’s wartime problems were not only thought but spelled out and implemented. Documenting the eager participation of some of the country’s best and brightest, it rejects interpretations that identify only Nazi leaders as the perpetrators of the Holocaust.
For Hitler’s thinkers—career-minded demographers, geographers, economists, civil servants, and academics in the Third Reich’s think tanks and bureaucratic offices—Europe was a drawing board on which to work out their grand designs. They were encouraged to rationalize production methods, standardize products, introduce an international division of labor, and modernize and simplify social structures. Ultimately, their work on everything from food shortages to birth control led to the sinister plan to 鈥渁djust鈥 the ratio between 鈥減roductive鈥 or 鈥渦nproductive鈥 population groups.
The ideas of these ever more radical and ideologically aggressive technocrats culminated in proposals that—using carefully guarded scientific and academic euphemisms—advocated state-directed mass extermination as a necessary and logical component of social modernization. And, not well known outside of Germany, these thinkers proposed not only one 鈥渇inal solution鈥 but serial genocides, planned in detail to be carried out over several decades.
This groundbreaking and controversial account of Hitler’s planners received widespread attention when it appeared in Germany. Now a masterful translation makes it available to an English-speaking audience for the first time.