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Utopia or Auschwitz: Germ...
 
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Hans Kundnani
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Utopia or Auschwitz: Germany's 1968 Generation and the Holocaust

3.25 of 5 stars 3.25  ·  rating details  ·  4 ratings  ·  3 reviews

One thing separated the left-wing students who demonstrated on the streets of West Berlin and Frankfurt in 1968 from their counterparts elsewhere around the world. The young Germans who became known as the 1968 generation or the "Achtundsechziger" had grown up knowing that their parents were responsible for Nazism and in particular for the Holocaust. Germany's 19

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Hardcover, 374 pages
Published November 15th 2009 by Columbia University Press (first published 2009)
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(showing 1-10 of 10)
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Anastasia Fitzgerald-Beaumont
At the beginning of last month fifty-eight year old Verena Becker appeared in court in Stuttgart, charged as an accomplice in the murder over thirty years ago of Siegfried Buback, then Germany’s prosecutor-general, in a drive-by shooting. Becker, if you have never heard of her, was once a member of a collection of terrorist fanatics generally known as the Baader-Meinhof Group, after the two principal leaders, though they preferred to call themselves the Rote Armee Fraktion – Red Army Faction – ...more
Kersplebedeb
Kind of routine observations about the West German contemporaries of the babyboomers, i.e. the sixties generation, using the life history of Joschka Fischer as an obvious thread weaving it all together. Joins Paul Berman's Power and the Idealists and Paul Hockenos' Joschka Fischer and the Making of the Berlin Republic as books telling the same (fascinating) story. What Kundnani adds to the mix is a focus on how the sixties generation handled the legacy of the Holocaust, and its relationship to a...more
David
David rated it 3 of 5 stars
Pretty good, though I'm not sure it would appeal to someone who wasn't already interested in Germany and/or the politics of the 1960s and 70s. It's a bit flat -- doesn't really bring the times and people to life, or present a novel theoretical perspective. Just one thing after another. Interesting for its revelations about the early turn of the German radical left toward pro-Palestinian antisemitism.

No idea whether it would be more or less interesting to someone who knows less about ...more
Elizabeth
Elizabeth marked it as to-read
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Timothy
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Vaughn
Vaughn rated it 2 of 5 stars
Shelves: left-marxian, sell
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Utopia or Auschwitz: Germany's 1968 Generation and the Holocaust. Hans Kundnani

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