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Overview
Joseph Goebbels was the most notorious demagogue of the twentieth century, and Hitler's closes confidant. This book uses his complete diary from 1923 - 1945, only recently released from the former Soviet Union, and a range of other sources, to present a challenging new interpretation of his life. It charts Goebbel's rise from provincial obscurity in the Rhineland, through his emergence as the most dynamic speaker of the Nazi Party and the Gauleiter of Berlin in the 1920s, to his appointment as Hitler's Propaganda Minister in 1933. Combining analysis of Goebbels' relationships with women and of his political career, it argue that there were clear threads running through his life, from a turbulent adolescence through to his death. Goebbels' love of German culture, his obsession with 'sacrifice', his fascination for Hitler, and his hatred of the Jews led him into a fatal involvement with German politics which culminated in his suicide, together with his wife and six children, in Hitler's bunker in 1945.
Synopsis
This book is an insightful new biography of Joseph Goebbels, Propaganda Minister of the Third Reich and one of the most important and troubling figures of the twentieth century. The first account to use all of Goebbels' surviving diaries, it sheds new light on his personality, private life and political convictions, as well as his relationship with Hitler.