Generational cohorts and the shaping of popular attitudes towards the Holocaust
TitleGenerational cohorts and the shaping of popular attitudes towards the Holocaust
Call number940.5318/0150
Object number05031FT
Place of publicationHampshire
PublisherPalgrave
Year of publication
2001
Physical descriptionVol. 3 pp652-663
MaterialArticle
ISBN333804864
NotesPapers from "Remembering for the Future" conference held in Oxford on 14-17th July 2000 Vol. 3 pp652-663
Description
Attempts to outline a theory linking defining experiences of "ordinary Germans" who came of age in the first half of the 20th century and their children who came of age in the second half. Distinctions are drawn between Nazism's founding fathers born at the close of the 19th century whose attitudes were largely shaped by the Treaty of Versailles; those born between 1901 and 1914, the "generation of perpetrators"; those born between 1915 and 1925 who supplied much of the staffing of the concentration camps; and subsequent generations. The generation born around 1968 felt vicitmised by their parents' silence and determined to learn for themselves the dark truths of the Nazi era.