Death from the Skies: How the British and Germans Survived Bombing in World War II
by Dietmar Suss 2020-11-25 03:20:50
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The German ''Blitz'' that followed the Battle of Britain killed tens of thousands and laid waste to large areas of many British cities. And although the destruction of 1940-1 was never repeated on the same scale, fears that Hitler possessed a secret ... Read more
The German ''Blitz'' that followed the Battle of Britain killed tens of thousands and laid waste to large areas of many British cities. And although the destruction of 1940-1 was never repeated on the same scale, fears that Hitler possessed a secret weapon of mass destruction never entirelydied, and were partially realized in the VI and V2 raids of 1944-5. The British and American response to the ''Blitz'', especially from 1943 onwards, was massive and incomparably more devastating - with apocalyptic consequences for German cities such as Hamburg, Dresden, and Berlin, to name but themost prominent.In this ground-breaking new book, German historian Dietmar Suss investigates the effects of the bombing on both Britain and Nazi Germany, showing how these two very different societies sought to withstand the onslaught and keep up morale amidst the material devastation and psychological trauma thatwas visited upon them. And, as he reflects in the conclusion, this is not a story that is safely confined to the past: the debate over the rights and the wrongs of the mass bombing of British and German cities during World War II remains a highly emotional subject even today. Less
  • File size
  • Print pages
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  • Publication date
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  • ISBN
  • 9.21 X 6.14 X 0 in
  • 736
  • Oxford University Press
  • February 7, 2014
  • English
  • 9780199668519
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