ABSTRACT

A widely celebrated intellectual historian of twentieth-century Europe, Anson Rabinbach is one of the most important scholars of National Socialism working over the last forty years. This volume collects, for the first time, his pathbreaking work on Nazi culture, antifascism, and the after-effects of Nazism on postwar German and European culture. Historically detailed and theoretically sophisticated, his essays span the aesthetics of production, messianic and popular claims, the ethos that Nazism demanded of its adherents, the brilliant and sometimes successful efforts of antifascist intellectuals to counter Hitler’s rise, the most significant concepts to emerge out of the 1930s and 1940s for understanding European authoritarianism, the major controversies around Nazism that took place after the regime’s demise, the philosophical claims of postwar philosophers, sociologists and psychoanalysts—from Theodor Adorno to Hannah Arendt and from Alexander Kluge to Klaus Theweleit—and the role of Auschwitz in European history.

chapter |18 pages

“The attraction of fascism itself”

Anson Rabinbach’s writings on Nazism and its opponents

part I|167 pages

Nazism

chapter 1|37 pages

The Beauty of Labor

The aesthetics of production in the Third Reich (1976) 1

chapter 2|8 pages

Organized mass culture in the Third Reich

The women of Kraft durch Freude (1986) 1

chapter 4|25 pages

The reader, the popular novel, and the imperative to participate

Reflections on public and private experience in the Third Reich (1991) 1

chapter 5|30 pages

Nazi culture

The sacred, the aesthetic, and the popular (2005) 1

chapter 7|12 pages

The temporary alliance between the elite and the mob

Reflections on the culture and ideology of National Socialism (2013) 1

part II|106 pages

Antifascism

chapter 10|26 pages

Staging antifascism

The Brown Book of the Reichstag Fire and Hitler Terror (2008) 1

chapter 11|15 pages

Freedom for Thälmann!

The Comintern and the campaign to free Ernst Thälmann, 1933–1939 (2017) 1

chapter 12|17 pages

Unclaimed heritage

Ernst Bloch’s Heritage of Our Times and the theory of fascism (1977) 1

chapter 13|30 pages

Man on ice

The persecution and assassination of Otto Katz (2006) 1

part III|188 pages

Aftermath

chapter 14|24 pages

Toward a Marxist theory of fascism and National Socialism

A report on developments in West Germany (1974) 1

chapter 15|16 pages

Eichmann in New York

The New York intellectuals and the Hannah Arendt controversy (2004) 1

chapter 18|29 pages

The Jewish Question in the German Question

On the Historikerstreit (1988) 1

chapter 19|20 pages

“The abyss that opened up before us”

Thinking about Auschwitz and modernity (2003) 1

chapter |31 pages

“Nazism was a unique modernist project”

Interview with Anson Rabinbach, December 2, 2019