Non­fic­tion

A Con­cise His­to­ry of the Third Reich

Wolf­gang Benz
  • Review
By – March 30, 2012
Wolf­gang Benz’s sixth book is an overview of the his­to­ry of Nazi Ger­many from 1933 to 1945. Fif­teen well writ­ten and nice­ly trans­lat­ed chap­ters cov­er Nazi state and soci­ety in a the­mat­ic and broad­ly chrono­log­i­cal fash­ion. The Holo­caust is cov­ered in two chap­ters: chap­ter nine, deal­ing with the per­se­cu­tion of Ger­man Jew­ry from 1933 to 1939, and chap­ter thir­teen, review­ing the Final Solu­tion from 1939 to 1945. Both chap­ters attempt to place the assault on Jew­ry into a broad­er Nazi racial and polit­i­cal con­text, while also retain­ing an under­stand­ing of the unique­ly Jew­ish aspects of Nazi pol­i­cy. In this respect, the two chap­ters are a sum­ma­ry of, and good com­ple­ment for, Benz’s brief The Holo­caust: A Ger­man His­to­ri­an Exam­ines the Geno­cide (1999). I have one crit­i­cism of the book: Benz added an intro­duc­tion for the Amer­i­can edi­tion that adds some of the need­ed Ger­man his­to­ry back­ground that most read­ers in this coun­try will need to place the Nazis into their prop­er Ger­man con­text. Albeit, this eight page excur­sus and the eleven page pro­logue that fol­lows (detail­ing the fall of the Weimar Repub­lic) are too cur­so­ry to be of any real use. If Benz sought to explain how the Nazis man­aged to wrest con­trol of Ger­many in 1933, he should have devot­ed an entire chap­ter to that subject.
Abra­ham J. Edel­heit is an asso­ciate pro­fes­sor of his­to­ry at Kings­bor­ough Com­mu­ni­ty Col­lege (CUNY) and the author, co-author, or edi­tor of eleven books on the Holo­caust, Zion­ism, Jew­ish and Euro­pean his­to­ry, and Mil­i­tary affairs. His most recent pub­li­ca­tion appeared in Armor mag­a­zine, the offi­cial jour­nal of the US Army Armor and Cav­al­ry Command.

Discussion Questions