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  • Moral combat : good and evil in World War II / Michael Burleigh
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Moral combat : good and evil in World War II / Michael Burleigh

Object Details

Notes
Originally published under title: Moral combat. London : HarperPress, 2010.
Contents
The predators -- Appeasement -- Brotherly enemies -- The rape of Poland -- Trampling the remains -- Not losing: Churchill's Britain -- Under the swastika: Nazi occupied Europe -- Barbarossa -- Global war -- The resistance -- Moral calculus -- Beneath the mask of command -- Antagonistic allies -- 'We were savages': combat soldiers -- Massacring the innocents -- Journeys through night -- Observing an avalanche -- Tenuous altruism -- 'The King's thunderbolts are righteous': RAF Bomber Command -- Is that Britain?--No, it's Brittany -- The predators at bay
Summary
British historian Burleigh (Blood Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism) delivers a long, riveting account of the awful atrocities of WWII and the perverted reasoning behind them. Burleigh explains that Communist, Nazi, Fascist, and Japanese systems claimed to be regimes of public virtue carrying out inexorable historical processes. Proclaiming that the only evil was obstructing this march to utopia, they discarded the rule of law and alternative moral authority (religion, ethics).
Data Source
Smithsonian Libraries
Date
2011
2010
C2011
Author
Burleigh, Michael 1955-
Type
Books
Physical description
xxi. 650 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., maps ; 24 cm
Title
Good and evil in World War II
Topic
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945--Moral and ethical aspects
Record ID
siris_sil_972456
Usage
CC0

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street map of Postal museum

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