Carte The Occupation Begins Ingrid Rehmann

The Occupation Begins

Life Under Nazi Rule in Europe

Limbă: engleză
Legare: Copertă tare
Disponibilitate: Nou în așteptare
Termenul este necunoscut
283.05 lei
Between 1939 and 1945, more than two hundred million Europeans lived under Nazi occupation, and yet...

Informații despre carte

Limbă
engleză
Legare
Carte - Copertă tare
Publicat
2026
Pagini
354
EAN
9789377940522
ISBN
9377940524
Enbook ID
53024930
Greutate
645
Dimensiuni
152 x 229 x 24

Descriere completă

Between 1939 and 1945, more than two hundred million Europeans lived under Nazi occupation, and yet that vast experience is too often compressed into a single image of jackboots and terror. The reality was both more banal and more disturbing: an administrative system of ration cards, identity papers, work permits, and municipal notices that shaped what civilians ate, where they could travel, what they could read, and which neighbours disappeared. This book recovers that texture. It treats nazi occupation as an architecture of control, built from policing, rationing, propaganda, and labour extraction, and operated by a tangled hierarchy of German agencies and local administrators whose rivalries sometimes mattered as much as their orders.

Drawing on the comparative method, the book moves across Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Poland, the Baltic states, Ukraine, and the Balkans, showing why occupation looked so different from one region to another. Readers will see how the same regime produced famine in Athens and relative quiet in Copenhagen, how forced labour quotas radicalised resistance in some countries while breaking it in others, and how wartime propaganda competed with clandestine newspapers and banned radio for the loyalty of populations under stress. The book takes seriously the grey zones between survival and complicity, examining collaboration studies alongside the histories of armed and civilian resistance, and offers a framework for thinking about the moral choices people made when information was scarce, risk was uneven, and the rules kept shifting.

Written for general readers, students of European history, and analysts interested in how authoritarian regimes govern conquered societies, the book is neither a national narrative nor a synthesis of atrocity. It is a structural account that will leave readers with a durable vocabulary for understanding occupation as a system: how it sorted populations, allocated scarcity, distributed fear, and shaped the postwar memory politics that still divide European societies. By the final chapter, the question is no longer what happened under occupation, but how the architecture of unfreedom is built, sustained, and, sometimes, undone.

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