
Shattered Lives: Ordinary Germans' Experience of the 20th Century
About This Novel
The "Weimar Generation" Germans born in the 1920s experienced almost all the important events of the 20th century: the Third Reich, World War II, the Holocaust, post-war reconstruction, Cold War divisions, and reunification and recovery after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Private life and the historical process are rarely closely intertwined. When they looked back on their life experiences, their former enthusiasm was disillusioned by seeing the truth about the dictatorship. Some repented, some used ignorance and being deceived as excuses, and some claimed that Germans were also victims to gain sympathy. Based on first-hand accounts from more than seventy autobiographies and memoirs, "Shattered Lives" describes 20th-century Germany from the perspective of ordinary people. Among them are soldiers who participated in the war on the front line, as well as women who endured the depression years on the home front; there are perpetrators of ethnic cleansing and victims of Nazi atrocities. By re-examining the German national identity, this book attempts to answer: why so many people supported Hitler's war and the brutality of the Nazis, and how they finally cut themselves off from racism and authoritarian regimes and re-embraced human rights, transforming from military aggressors into pillars of democracy in Europe.
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