Auschwitz: A History

· Penguin UK
5.0
2 reviews
Ebook
176
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

At the terrible heart of the modern age lies Auschwitz. In a total inversion of earlier hopes about the use of science and technology to improve, extend and protect human life, Auschwitz manipulated the same systems to quite different ends. In Sybille Steinbacher's terse, powerful new book, the reader is led through the process by which something unthinkable to any European in the 1930s had become a sprawling, industrial reality during the course of the world war. How Auschwitz grew and mutated into an entire dreadful city, how both those who managed it and those who were killed by it came to be in Poland in the 1940s, and how it was allowed to happen, is something everyone needs to understand.

Ratings and reviews

5.0
2 reviews
A Google user
August 15, 2017
Important,Factual & should be read in Schools.
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About the author

Sybille Steinbacher teaches at The University of Bochum. She is currently Visiting Fellow at Harvard University.


Shaun Whiteside is a previous winner of The Schlegel-Tieck Prize for German Translations, and translator of The Birth of Tragedy and Musil's The Confessions of Young Törless for Penguin Classics. He lives in London.

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