Frauen
Price: $25.95
Subtitle: German Women Recall the Third
Reich
Author: Alison Owings
Subject: Jewish Studies/Sociology
Paper ISBN 0-8135-2200-5
Pages: 528 pp.
"Powerful testimony from 29 German women survivors of the
Third Reich that provides not only a stunning portrait of life on the
home front but also insights into a society that spawned both Hitler
and the Holocaust. . . . Oral history at its best . . . a much-needed
record of WWII German women."--Kirkus Reviews
"In vivid and often poignant portraits-cum-interviews . . .
[Owings] has captured the extraordinary diversity of their experiences
. . . each portrait, each interview, provides valuable insight into
what happened to half the German population between 1933 and
1945."--New York Times Book Review
"These oral histories displace the silences and stereotypes
that have prevented us from recognizing the myriad ways German women
and their families responded to Nazism. . . . They probe the
complexities and contradictions that German women faced during the Nazi
era, reminding us that human action is never automatic or
overdetermined. . . . Reading Frauen we begin to glimpse how the
exercise of conscience is simultaneously possible and subverted under
fascism."--Women's Review of Books
"A fascinating account. . . . it tells us things that we
didn't know about the Hitler period, but more perhaps about the Germany
of the present and the difficulty many Germans have in coming to terms
with their past. The women Alison Owings has interviewed are an
interesting and diverse lot, and her conversations with them are
spirited, sometimes contentious, often funny, and always
revealing."--Gordon A. Craig, J. E. Wallace Sterling Professor of
Humanities, Emeritus, Stanford University, and author of The Germans
"A remarkable work of history that stands out from the vast
library of World War II studies for its sheer intimacy and its
sometimes startling perspectives. . . . Frauen transcends the genre of
oral history and turns into something more elaborate and accomplished
and memorable."--Los Angeles Times Book Review
"[An] engaging book . . . this is oral history as it should
be done."--Chicago Tribune
"Frauen goes further than any book I know toward addressing
the eternal question of the private citizen's individual responsibility
within a fascist regime. Few of Ms. Owings's Frauen can be called
heroines, or even passive resisters. But that is her point. This book
will be mined by contemporary and future scholars, indeed, by all who
puzzle over the moral failures of 'human nature'."--Susan Brownmiller
"An extraordinarily rich historical resource, both
exhilarating and exasperating, moving, and occasionally, hilarious.
Owings asks tough questions, has a fine eye for telling gestures, and
chooses her subjects from all walks of life. . . . An excellent
work."--Choice
"This collection . . . will fascinate anyone who has wondered
how ordinary women experienced life in Nazi Germany. . . . A valuable
work of reportage."--Booklist
"The effect is akin to eavesdropping on an intimate
conversation and helps put events and people's reactions to them in
context . . . Owings resists stereotyping her subjects."--San Francisco
Chronicle
"Owings deploys her journalistic skills to present the women
in striking juxtaposition to one another, with vivid sketches of their
appearance, character, mannerisms, surroundings and family background.
. . . for anyone interested in the Germans and Germany, Frauen makes
for compelling reading."--Times Literary Supplement
"A vivid picture of Germany under the Nazis emerges from this
collection of unsettling interviews."--Publishers Weekly
"There is much, much to be learned here about humankind and
effective (and infrequent) Christian witness, and about everyday life
on the homefront. You will not find a better written, nor more careful,
respectful, honest, and humble presentation of a grotesque historical
context than this."--William W. Rankin, Anglican Theological Review
"A groundbreaking set of oral histories. . . . Highly
recommended."--Library Journal
"Owings' painstakingly collected oral histories contain the
confessions of few true-blue Nazis. But . . . we encounter plenty of
dissemblers and Nazi fellow travelers. . . . Their stories read as case
histories demonstrating (it seems) the powerlessness of the individual
in the face of crushing historical circumstance."--Philadelphia Inquirer
"A fascinating probe of a generation of women whose voices
have not, until now, been heard."--Jewish Times
Alison Owings is a free-lance journalist who has contributed
regularly major television network news broadcasts. She lives in Mill
Valley, California, with her husband.
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Price: $25.95
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