Surviving the Swastika
Scientific Research in Nazi Germany
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:10th Feb '94
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Surviving the Swastika examines scientific research under National Socialism through the prism of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society for the Advancement of the Sciences, the prestigious forerunner of the Max Planck Society. Home to over twenty Nobel-prize winning scientists, the Society was at the forefront of scientific advance in the first half of the twentieth century. Surprisingly, the Society not only survived National Socialism, but often thrived. Kristie Macrakis provides a full-scale analysis of the Society's development within the context of the phases of a polycratic National Socialist state. A spectrum of responses to National Socialism existed there from moral probity to accommodation and opportunism. Macrakis uncovers this differentiated scientific and social landscape by covering topics ranging from Max Planck's failed negotiations with recalcitrant government officials regarding the expulsion of Jews and Communists to his success in securing a thriving community for basic biological research in Berlin-Dahlem, from the practice of nuclear power research to institutional growth.
Kristie Macrakis has written a very good book on a very important topic...well-reserached, well-argued, and an important contribution to our understanding of science under Hitler. * Forschungsberichte und Rezensionen Archiv fur Sozialgeschichte 35 *
ISBN: 9780195070101
Dimensions: 162mm x 235mm x 25mm
Weight: 644g
320 pages