ABSTRACT

A powerful and absorbing study of the German home front from the outbreak of hostilities to the collapse of the Third Reich. It explores the impact of Nazi domestic policies on the German people, and the effects of the extreme radicalization of the regime under the pressures of total war. It examines the economy, social policy, and the realities of daily life; the part played by the law and the Churches; the changing role of women; the fate of foreign workers, prisoners of war and the Jews; and the extent of resistance to the regime. At its heart is the crucial relationship of the party, the state and public opinion in the Hitler Years.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |31 pages

Hitler’s State at War

chapter |36 pages

Daily Life and Daily Worries

chapter |33 pages

Wartime Social Policy

chapter |18 pages

Women in Wartime Germany

chapter |22 pages

Foreign Workers and Prisoners of War

chapter |22 pages

The Law

chapter |23 pages

The Fate of the German Jews in Wartime

chapter |17 pages

The Churches and the War

chapter |23 pages

Resistance

chapter |14 pages

The Dönitz Government

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion