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Eric A. Johnson

    Eric Johnson's scholarship centers on the social history of Europe, with a particular emphasis on modern Germany and the Holocaust. His work delves into themes of crime, urbanization, and justice, evolving towards a deep engagement with 20th-century historical events. Johnson has held numerous academic positions, teaching a diverse range of subjects. His current research interests include Allied prisoners of war during WWII and a personal account of the fall of the Berlin Wall and German reunification.

    Nazi Terror
    • Nazi Terror

      The Gestapo, Jews and Ordinary Germans

      • 636 pages
      • 23 hours of reading

      Eric Johnson's exhaustive new history tackles the central aspect of the Nazi dictatorship - terror - head on. By focusing on the role of the individual and on the role of the society in making terror work, he is able to definitively and dramatically answer such questions as these: Who were the Gestapo officers? Were they merely banal paper shufflers, as Hannah Arendt depicted Eichmann, or were they recognizably evil? What tactics did they use? Were they motivated by an eliminationist anti-Semitism? Did the average German know about the mass murder of Jews and other undesirables while it was happening? Exactly how was Nazi terror applied in the daily lives of ordinary Jews and Germans?Johnson spent years of research in Gestapo archives in three Rhineland communities, reading and analyzing more than 1100 Gestapo and ”special court” case files. He conducted surveys and interviews with German perpetrators, Jewish victims, and ordinary Germans who experienced the Third Reich at first hand. Consequently, his book is able to settle many nagging questions about who, exactly, was responsible for what, who knew what, and when they knew it. Nazi Terror is the most fine-grained portrait we may ever have of the mechanism of terror in a dictatorship.

      Nazi Terror1999
      3.3