Janosch Steuwer is a historian of modern Germany and Europe. After positions at Universities of Bochum and Zurich, he is working at the Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg. His research interests cover a wide range of topics, such as the history of childhood since the 1970s and the history of National Socialism and its aftermath. In particular, he is concerned with the ways in which ordinary people experienced and understood the periods they lived through.
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Description
Acknowledgments List of Abbreviations and Terms Introduction Part One 1. The Social Dynamics of the "Seizure of Power" 2. The Search for a Personal Stance toward the Nazi Regime 3. Establishing a Personal Stance toward the Regime While under Social Observation Part Two 4. The National Socialist Education Project 5. Political Self-Formation in the Nazi Education Project Part Three 6. A New Political Culture in a New Political System 7. The Government and Its Volk 8. The Private and the Limits of the National Socialist Political System Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index of Persons Index of Subjects
In "A Third Reich, as I See It" Janosch Steuwer has mined 140 diaries written between 1933 and 1939 to give us a fascinating picture of how Germans reacted to Nazi rule and reworked their sense of self to find their place in the new order. Steuwer has assembled a rich cast of characters, ranging from urban workers and an innkeeper from the Black Forest to middle-class doctors and lawyers, old sceptics (The Times Literary Supplement)

