In the second volume of his landmark biography, , British historian Ian Kershaw delivers what is widely considered the definitive account of the German dictator's fall from the height of his power to the final days in the Berlin bunker. The Architecture of Power: "Working Towards the Führer"
: As the tide turned after the 1942 attack on Russia, Kershaw describes Hitler’s retreat into a "personal fantasy," refusing to address the German people and eventually masterminding defeat from his underground headquarters. Critical Legacy
Critics from outlets like The Sunday Telegraph and the Financial Times have praised the work for its "magisterial" detail and objective tone. It received numerous accolades, including the and the British Academy Book Prize .
Kershaw’s central thesis is that the Third Reich did not operate as a top-down, efficient monolith, but rather through a process he calls .
: Following the "hubris" of his rise (covered in volume one), this volume details the "nemesis" (retribution) invited by Hitler’s increasingly reckless gambles and "war of annihilation".
: Kershaw argues that Hitler himself was often an "unperson"—a political shell—who derived his immense power from the institutional structures and public "Hitler Myth" that Germans built around him. From Triumph to Annihilation
Hitler 1936 1945 Ian Kershaw Epub -
In the second volume of his landmark biography, , British historian Ian Kershaw delivers what is widely considered the definitive account of the German dictator's fall from the height of his power to the final days in the Berlin bunker. The Architecture of Power: "Working Towards the Führer"
: As the tide turned after the 1942 attack on Russia, Kershaw describes Hitler’s retreat into a "personal fantasy," refusing to address the German people and eventually masterminding defeat from his underground headquarters. Critical Legacy Hitler 1936 1945 Ian Kershaw epub
Critics from outlets like The Sunday Telegraph and the Financial Times have praised the work for its "magisterial" detail and objective tone. It received numerous accolades, including the and the British Academy Book Prize . In the second volume of his landmark biography,
Kershaw’s central thesis is that the Third Reich did not operate as a top-down, efficient monolith, but rather through a process he calls . It received numerous accolades, including the and the
: Following the "hubris" of his rise (covered in volume one), this volume details the "nemesis" (retribution) invited by Hitler’s increasingly reckless gambles and "war of annihilation".
: Kershaw argues that Hitler himself was often an "unperson"—a political shell—who derived his immense power from the institutional structures and public "Hitler Myth" that Germans built around him. From Triumph to Annihilation