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Auschwitz:

A History
Front Cover
12 Reviews
HarperCollins, Aug 16, 2005 - History - 167 pages

At the terrible heart of the modern age lies Auschwitz. In a total inversion of earlier hopes about the use of science and technology to improve, extend, and protect human life, Auschwitz manipulated the same systems to quite different ends.

In Sybille Steinbacher's terse, powerful new book, the reader is led through the process by which something unthinkable to anyone on earth in the 1930s had become a sprawling, industrial reality during the course of the Second World War. How Auschwitz grew and mutated into an entire dreadful city, how both those who managed it and those who were killed by it came to be in Poland in the 1940s, and how it was allowed to happen, is something everyone needs to understand.

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Review: Auschwitz: A History

User Review  - Jennifer Gelert - Goodreads

This was a very good book. Talked about the camps with information I had not heard before. Very detailed about what happened and why. How the camp started out as a prisoner camp and not the death ... Read full review

Review: Auschwitz: A History

User Review  - Chelsea Floyd - Goodreads

I just kind of skimmed through this book. It was a fairly quick and easy read, and just the main facts about Auschwitz. Most things I had already learned from high school, other books, and the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC :) Read full review

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About the author (2005)

Sybille Steinbacher is assistant professor in the Faculty of Modern and Contemporary History at the Ruhr University, Bochum. During 2004-5 she was a visiting fellow for European studies at Harvard University. She lives in Germany.

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