nice | Mothers in the Fatherland: Women, the Family and Nazi Politics | Claudia Koonz
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Mothers in the Fatherland: Women, the Family and Nazi Politics
Claudia Koonz
St. Martin's Griffin
, 1988 - 600 pages
average customer review:
based on 8 reviews
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highly recommended
Interesting and well written discussion
In her book
Mothers
in the
Fatherland
:
Women
, the
Family
and
Nazi
Politics
historian Claudia Koonz tackles an interesting aspect of Nazi Germany and women's history. Koonz's topic is one that has been relatively unexplored, despite the vast abundance of historical writing and discussion on Nazi Germany since WWII. I enjoyed the book for the most part, and found her ideas and explanations for the many contradictions and issues women found in Nazi Germany to be satisfactory and enlightening. Using many previously unearthed documents and sources, Koonz attempts to explain how women survived and adapted during such a misogynist and time.
I found Koonz's writing to be both in-depth and comprehensive, but rarely boring or cumbersome. I think she did an excellent job of keeping the reader informed of her thought progression, and at times I felt that I was along with her looking for sources or trying to figure out an explanation to a problem. I liked her analysis of the Weimar republic and "New Woman" and how those factors influenced many women's decisions and opinions on submitting to Nazi dominance. I also found her chapter on Jewish women very enlightening and yet frustrating. Reading about how hopeless it seemed to the women when their children brought home Nazi propaganda from class provides a good example of the cruelty (and stupidity) of the Nazis. I do feel that Koonz tended to get bogged down in her examples of particular Nazi women. Although they were necessary, I feel that they ran long-winded at times. Overall, Mothers in the Fatherland is a very interesting and insightful analysis of this dark period of women's history.
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simply amazing--history that we rarely see
It is very rarely I would call a historical work of scholarship a 'page-turner', 'eye-opener', and 'thrilling' and this book is all three.
This work is also chilling. A whisper is louder than a scream is an old saying, and it was so relevant in the case of the
women
's role in making
Nazi
sm a power and force to be reckoned with.
Aside from the in-depth research, Ms Koonz's strength lies in her powers of detailed description of how nazism went froma man-centered group of hate-politicians to an active community.
nice
This is a very good pioneering study of the
women
's sphere of Germany during the Hitler years. I especially enjoyed the portions on Sholtz-Klink, the
Nazi
women's leader. And I was especially facinated by Mutter Diehl's idea of a Women's Chamber of Syndicates.
This is a good pioneering study of this topic. Further studies are needed.
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Fascinating, Disturbing, Informative
"
Mothers
in the
Fatherland
:
Women
, the
Family
, and
Nazi
Politics
," is a scholary work, but I read it quickly, as if it were a popular page-turner. I asked myself why I was reading it so quickly.
I read this book so quickly, I think, because it fascinated me, of course, but also because it disturbed me and, given how informative the book is, I kept expecting that I'd turn the page and find THE EXPLANATION that would make it all make sense to me, and give me peace of mind.
The "it" I wanted explained, of course, was the absolute evil of Nazism. The Nazism in this book is not -- for the most part -- the public Nazism of "Trimuph of the Will" or the notorious Nazism of Auschwitz.
It's the Nazism of cookie bakers and apron wearers. It's the Nazism of women breast feeding their children and dreaming of a Judenrein Germany; their hearts aflutter at thoughts of their fuhrer.
Koonz has amassed a trove of data, including personal letters, memoirs, and newsclips, that one is unlikely to encounter in other volumes.
Inevitably, her book emerges as a social history of Nazism, the Nazism of the hearth, as it were, rather than the headlines.
As alien as Nazism is, the reader cannot help but draw parallels to the present moment.
Social reformers who oppose any birth control, and who have deep convictions about woman's place being in the home, having as many babies as possible, and quietly and unobtrusively devoting themselves to making life easier for their husbands and sons who serve the state, are not exclusively a thing of the past.
This book, in passages, made my skin crawl. It certainly made me think. It did make me cry. It is a worthy addition to the scholarship on the Nazi era, and an invitation to deep thought about misogynist ideologues' control over women's lives.
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wonderful
I have just finished taking a semester long course with Claudia Koonz at Duke University, and have been inspired to read more about the cultural aspects of
Nazi
Germany. I was impressed that she truly is as good a writer as she is professor. I highly recommend the book and highly recommend coming to Duke to take a class with her!!
National Book Award Nominee
American Library Association Notable Book
An Outstanding Book in
Women
's History at the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians
From the collapse of the Kaiser's regime to the destruction of Hitler in his bunker, Germany has been studied, explicated, and psychoanalyzed time and again. Yet there have been few detailed investigations into the historical and cultural roles played by German women in modern times. This important book, which Kirkus called "original and intriguing," corrects this imbalance.
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