Out of the Darkness, 9780241303498
Hardcover
From ashes to moral compass? Germany’s journey of reinvention revealed.
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Out of the Darkness

the germans, 1942-2022

$123.63

  • Hardcover

    880 pages

  • Release Date

    12 February 2024

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Summary

From Ruins to Redemption: A History of the German Reinvention

In 1945, Germany was devastated, its people burdened by the weight of history for the horrors of genocide and war. By 2015, the nation emerged as a moral leader, welcoming refugees while navigating complex economic and political landscapes.

This book explores the vital question of how the Germans have reinvented themselves since the darkness of the Nazi era. It tells the dramatic story from the end of World War II…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780241303498
ISBN-10:0241303494
Author:Frank Trentmann
Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
Imprint:Allen Lane
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:880
Release Date:12 February 2024
Weight:1.46kg
Dimensions:240mm x 162mm x 55mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

I could not put the book down. The way Frank Trentmann writes history, the way he brings together things great and small, analysis with narrative, is wonderful – Bernhard Schlink, author of The ReaderOutstanding … A meticulous and well-judged account of Germany from 1942 to today [that] shows how it transformed itself from pariah nation to leader of a continent – Simon Heffer * Daily Telegraph, Best Books of the Year *An impressive account of how Germany built a new identity for itself after the barbaric Nazi years … terrifically insightful … This book runs to 838 pages, but barely a word is wasted. Trentmann is a skilful and unflashy storyteller with flickers of gentle irony. Echoing Tolstoy’s theory of history as the “sum of human wills”, he aims to stitch the scraps of everyday experience into a quilt of grand narrative. This results in a good deal of richness, colour and subtlety – Oliver Moody * The Times *Frank Trentmann’s enthralling account of the Germans since 1942 is rooted in a brilliant insight: that the morality Germans invoked in their struggle to make sense of their place in history was never a transcendent standard, but a malleable and contingent substance whose nature was always contested. This fascinating and compelling moral history takes us to the centre of modern Germany’s self-understanding, moving elegantly between politics, economics, culture and the private reflections of individuals – Christopher Clark, author of The Sleepwalkers and Revolutionary SpringCompelling … vivid … fresh … one of the most impressive studies I have read of German guilt and shame … an eloquent and original account of the last eighty years of the country’s history – David Blackbourn * Literary Review *Absorbing… Frank Trentmann’s approach is novel [and] his Germans leap vividly off the page, both as archetypes and as complex, multi-layered individuals… an excellent book – Brendan Simms * New Statesman *Superb – Stuart Jeffries * Spectator *In Out of the Darkness Trentmann does something different and extraordinary. He has composed an account of recent Germany that is not primarily political or economic or social, but moral.. [His] moral history is enormous, but never heavy-going: he is a gifted and intelligent writer – Neal Ascherson * London Review of Books *Masterly. Frank Trentmann’s wide-ranging, deeply researched, nuanced evaluation of changing German mentalities and moral challenges since the Nazi era is a tour de force – Ian Kershaw, author of Hitler and Personality and PowerExcellent … Trentmann’s study marshals an immense amount of evidence in response to a single basic question: how did Germans reassert themselves as morally oriented human beings? – Ben Hutchinson * Times Literary Supplement *

About The Author

Frank Trentmann

Frank Trentmann is Professor of History at Birkbeck, University of London, and at the University of Helsinki. He is the author of Empire of Things and Free Trade Nation, was a Moore Scholar at Caltech and has been awarded the Whitfield Prize, the Austrian Science Book Prize, the Humboldt Prize for Research and the 2023 Bochum Historians’ Prize. He grew up in Hamburg and lives in London.

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