Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Zweites Buch (German: [ˈtsvaɪ̯təs buːχ], "Second Book"), published in English as Hitler's Secret Book and later as Hitler's Second Book, [1] is an unedited transcript of Adolf Hitler's thoughts on foreign policy written in 1928; it was written after Mein Kampf and was not published in his lifetime.
Hitler's Second Book: The Unpublished Sequel to Mein Kampf, Enigma Books, 2003 ISBN 1-929631-16-2. Visions of Victory: The Hopes of Eight World War II Leaders. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-521-85254-4. with Hugh Trevor-Roper, Hitler's Table Talk 1941–1944: Secret Conversations.
A pirated edition was published in English in New York in 1962. The first authoritative English edition was not published until 2003 (Hitler's Second Book: The Unpublished Sequel to Mein Kampf, ISBN 1-929631-16-2).
Hitler's Religion: The Twisted Beliefs that Drove the Third Reich. Washington DC: Regnery History, 2016. Weinberg, Gerhard. ed. Hitler's Second Book: The Unpublished Sequel to Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler. Translated by Krista Smith. New York: Enigma, 2003. Weingartner, James J. Hitler's Guard: The Story of the Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler, 1933 ...
In the unpublished sequel to Mein Kampf, the Zweites Buch (1928, Second Book), Hitler further presents the ideology of Nazi Lebensraum, in accordance with the then-future foreign policy of the Nazi Party.
Calic considers that during the confidential interviews with Breitling, Hitler: …unfolded like a panorama all that in his speeches remained concealed behind phrases and gestures, things not even hinted at in Mein Kampf, the subterfuges and methods of achieving power, the technique of the legal coup d’état to establish total domination over Germany, the brutal extension of his tyranny over ...
The Allies seized vast masses of documents in 1945, which British historian Alan Bullock (1914–2004) used with a brilliant writing style. Bullock's biography Hitler: A Study in Tyranny (1952) depicts Hitler as the product of the chaos in Germany after 1918, where uncertainty and anger inflamed extremism and created the ideal setting for Hitler's demagoguery to succeed.
In his Second Book, which was unpublished during the Nazi era, Hitler praised Sparta (using ideas perhaps borrowed from Ernst Haeckel), [25] adding that he considered Sparta to be the first "Völkisch State". He endorsed what he perceived to be an early eugenics treatment of deformed children: Sparta must be regarded as the first Völkisch State.