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History / European Studies / German Studies / Jewish Studies




Nazi Culture
Intellectual, Cultural, and Social Life in the Third Reich
George L. Mosse

George L. Mosse logo
George L. Mosse Series in Modern European Cultural
and Intellectual History

Stanley G. Payne, David J. Sorkin, and John S. Tortorice, Series Editors


"For the sanity of the human race it is essential that the record of Hitler's Germany should remain alive and be retold again and again as a warning for the future. Professor Mosse's book helps keep the record alive."
—Saturday Review

What was life like under the Third Reich? What went on between parents and children? What were the prevailing attitudes about sex, morality, religion? How did workers perceive the effects of the New Order in the workplace? What were the cultural currents—in art, music, science, education, drama, and on the radio?

Professor Mosse's extensive analysis of Nazi culture—groundbreaking upon its original publication in 1966—is now offered to readers of a new generation. Selections from newspapers, novellas, plays, and diaries as well as the public pronouncements of Nazi leaders, churchmen, and professors describe National Socialism in practice and explore what it meant for the average German.

By recapturing the texture of culture and thought under the Third Reich, Mosse's work still resonates today—as a document of everyday life in one of history's darkest eras and as a living memory that reminds us never to forget.


George L. Mosse
(1919–1999) was the John C. Bascom Professor of European History and the Weinstein-Bascom Professor of Jewish Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He has long been recognized as one of the most creative and innovative historians of modern Europe during the second half of the nineteenth century. His research ranged from the Protestant Reformation and the seventeenth century to the political, social and cultural history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Mosse revolutionized the study of Nazism and facism, and opened new dimensions in such diverse fields as nationalism, racism, historical memory and symbolism, the commemoration of mass death, German-Jewish history, and the history of sexuality and the body. No other Europeanist historian of the later twentieth century exhibited so broad a range of research and analysis.

The University of Wisconsin Press also publishes
George L. Mosse's Confronting History: A Memoir

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cover of Nazi Culture is blood-red and black, with a chilling photo of a classroom of young boys in uniform giving the Hitler salute

October 2003
LC: 2003045827 DD
448 pp. 6 x 9

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Paper $32.95 a
ISBN 978-0-299-19304-1
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"A magnificently edited collection."
Chicago Tribune

"A full picture of the scope and methods of the anti-cultural vandalism of the Nazis."
Christian Science Monitor

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