Discover

Matthias Schmidt

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1952 (74 years old)
Germany
4 books
0.0 (0)
0 readers

Description

There is no description yet, we will add it soon.

Books

Newest First

DVU im Aufwärtstrend – Gefahr für die Demokratie?

0.0 (0)
0

Rechtsradikale Tendenzen in der Bundeswehr, rechtsextreme Aufmärsche in Leipzig und nicht zuletzt der schockierende Wahlerfolg der »Deutschen Volksunion« (DVU) bei der Landtagswahl in Sachsen-Anhalt: Vorboten einer »Rechtswende« in der Bundesrepublik? Kann die Demokratie dem Erstarken rechtsextremer Kräfte wirkungsvoll begegnen? Die Autoren analysieren die DVU als bundesweiten Akteur. Neueste Entwicklungen in der Parteiorganisation kommen ebenso zur Sprache wie die Parlamentsarbeit auf kommunaler und auf Landesebene. Die Darstellung wird ergänzt um die Erfahrungen demokratischer Politiker aus ihrer täglichen parlamentarischen Auseinandersetzung mit Abgeordneten der DVU. Ein besonderes Schwergewicht wird auf die Entwicklung politischer Strategien gegen rechtsextreme Parteien gelegt. Dies macht das Buch zu einer wertvollen praktisch-politischen Orientierungshilfe.

Albert Speer

0.0 (0)
0

Gitta Sereny first saw Albert Speer on trial at Nuremberg. Over the last years of his life she came to know him - through hundreds of hours of conversations - as no other biographer has known a Nazi leader. She interviewed as well the people around him - the celebrated, the notorious and the ordinary. Speer gave Sereny, for her use, a number of unpublished manuscripts, and after his death she obtained access to many of his papers. Out of her probings a huge, and hugely alive, portrait emerges. Sereny takes us through the emotional desert of Speer's childhood and marriage, through his embrace (basically, she demonstrates, for nonideological reasons) of the Nazi Party and his service as Minister of Armaments and Munitions, during which his brutal use of slave labor extended a lost war. She superbly portrays the circles in which Speer functioned: the ambivalent General Staff and the infinitely peculiar and nightmarish upper echelons of Nazism. We see Speer accused of war crimes at Nuremberg, and during his twenty years in Spandau prison, struggling to accept individual responsibility for his actions. Throughout, in person or in memory, Hitler is startlingly present, his friendship with Speer bordering on love. Sereny shows us Speer as inveterate schemer, as spectacular planner and maneuverer. We see him also as unique among Hitler's men in the integrity of his battle with conscience. His progress from moral blindness through moral self-education to a torturous coming-to-terms with his own acts - this is the elemental matter at the heart of a book that stunningly illuminates the man, the war, the Third Reich, the Nazi mind and the complex comingling, in one person or society, of good and evil.